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Deep Dive [clear filter]
Wednesday, November 11
 

2:00pm EST

Tool Petting Zoo: Getting Hands-on with Airtable and Other Tools for Collections, Exhibitions, Project Management, and Content Strategy, and Workflow

Join this session to meet real live examples of museums getting creative with collaborative tools to support their work. Several presenters will provide focused demonstrations of Airtable, Trello, Slack, and more. They’ll illustrate how their teams leverage free or inexpensive software to establish and optimize workflows for digital content strategy, social media, exhibitions planning, collections data, project management, and professional development. In addition to our pre-planned presentations, we’ll crowdsource problems in search of a solution and invite attendees to share their own favorite tools with the group. Then we will open the room to the “tool petting zoo”: hands-on demonstrations and consultations in which participants can test drive the tools shared in the overview and begin building their own.

Deep Dive sign-ups open Wednesday, September 9. Space is limited and advance registration is required—so mark your calendars! Once sessions are filled, there will be a waitlist and MCN will notify attendees as spots become available.

Speakers
avatar for Andrea Ledesma

Andrea Ledesma

Marketing Operations Manager, Monterey Bay Aquarium
avatar for Sierra Van Ryck deGroot

Sierra Van Ryck deGroot

Education Programs Manager, Poster House
HZ

Hannah Zuber

Archivist for Visual Materials, Chicago History Museum
avatar for Dana Allen-Greil

Dana Allen-Greil

Director of Digital Strategy, Monterey Bay Aquarium
Dana Allen-Greil is Director of Digital Strategy at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Dana has led web and social media efforts at the National Archives, National Gallery of Art, Ogilvy Public Relations, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, and the Kaiser Family Foundation... Read More →
avatar for Hannah Ostroff

Hannah Ostroff

Digital Communications Editor, Smithsonian
Hannah S. Ostroff is a writer and digital strategist at the Smithsonian, where she serves as the primary voice for the institution’s central social media accounts. In this role, she tells stories about everything from astronauts to Japanese art. She has worked on social media campaigns... Read More →


Wednesday November 11, 2020 2:00pm - 3:30pm EST
Deep Dive/Workshop Channel (limited space)
 
Thursday, November 12
 

11:00am EST

From Museum Studies Programmes to Museum’s Hiring Pools: Evaluating Digital Literacy and Skills Taught in Higher-Education Courses

We would like to invite participants to a roundtable discussion where we will explore the failure and successes of Museum Studies curricula in relation to the digital literacy and skills that the sector seeks to develop. Our aim is to provide a space to reexamine the existing relationship between academia and GLAM institutions for a more sustainable practice-led partnership.

Deep Dive sign-ups open Wednesday, September 9. Space is limited and advance registration is required—so mark your calendars! Once sessions are filled, there will be a waitlist and MCN will notify attendees as spots become available.

Speakers
avatar for Maria Paula Arias (she/her)

Maria Paula Arias (she/her)

Lecturer, Manchester Metropolitan University
I am an early career researcher interested in how museums and galleries use social media. Particularly, I am interested in the ways social media platforms and their audiences are valued and, therefore, what their relationships are with the brands of such cultural institutions. Furthermore... Read More →
avatar for Sarah Feinstein

Sarah Feinstein

Teaching Fellow, University of Leeds (UK)
Dr Sarah Feinstein has both academic and professional experience in heritage and museum studies. She acted as a lecturer in Museum Studies at the Institute for Cultural Practices at the University of Manchester in 2018-2019, as well as providing training for PGRs on collaborating... Read More →


Thursday November 12, 2020 11:00am - 12:30pm EST
Deep Dive/Workshop Channel (limited space)

1:00pm EST

Money Matters: Driving Revenue through Business Model Innovation

Link to presentation: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/12F4A1ORfdq_AvGe8QbAN_9FYuKVQuv_CFKPSNw3Eb_E/edit?usp=sharing

Revenue is often treated as a dirty word within the non-profit and cultural sectors, but it is crucial to achieving financial sustainability. Furthermore, it is not static; continuous innovation is needed simply to sustain one’s position in a marketplace, let alone expand in reach and impact. The past year has brought such needs even further to the fore, as primary forms of revenue generation - admissions, special exhibitions, etc. - have been shut down and organizations have had to scramble to bring in money through methods both familiar and brand-new.

In this session, participants will learn-by-doing: working through a series of steps to generate, share, and build upon each others’ ideas for revenue creation through new offerings, services, and business models. We will introduce simple innovation frameworks to guide the activity, which can be easily applied at participant’s home institutions. Session leaders (and participants) will bring examples as inspiration, and to help participants challenge their orthodoxies and think expansively on how they might bring in revenue, while aligning with and further advancing their mission.

The session will apply a few ‘lenses’ to accelerate this process, including membership, programming, and partnerships. At the conclusion of the session, participants will have a view towards developing and maintaining a balanced portfolio of revenue-generating innovation.

Deep Dive sign-ups open Wednesday, September 9. Space is limited and advance registration is required—so mark your calendars! Once sessions are filled, there will be a waitlist and MCN will notify attendees as spots become available.

Speakers
avatar for Mitchell Sava

Mitchell Sava

VP of Innovation, Learning, and Engagement, Museum of Life and Science
Mitch Sava is the Vice President of Innovation, Learning, and Engagement at the North Carolina Museum of Life and Science, where he has been since 2016. In this role, he helps drive the development of new services and partnerships - on and offline - for the museum to reach new audiences... Read More →
avatar for Rosie Siemer

Rosie Siemer

Founder + CEO, FIVESEED
My passion for enhancing and promoting the museum experience inspired me to launch FIVESEED, a research and strategy partner to arts and culture and conservation organizations worldwide. I've had the honor of guiding dozens of museums in the development and execution of data-informed... Read More →


Thursday November 12, 2020 1:00pm - 2:30pm EST
Deep Dive/Workshop Channel (limited space)
 
Wednesday, November 18
 

2:00pm EST

MuseWeb Master Class: Virtual Tours

NOTE: capacity is limited to 35 attendees, first-come, first-served. No additional charge is required.

A virtual tour is a form of semi-immersive VR technology that allows you to experience a certain location or virtual content remotely. The concept is to represent a real place in a virtual world that allows you to explore the place as if you are actually there.

While virtual museum tours have been around for a long time with The Frick Collection offering virtual tours as early as 1999, clearly over the past decade, Virtual Reality (VR) has gone mainstream. Technology has advanced rapidly in the last few years and in addition to museums, VR experiences can now be found at theme parks, FECs, retail malls and are now the hot item when selling or renting your house. By the year 2022, the global VR market is estimated to grow to $209.2 billion. This is 7.7 times more than the 2018’s global market (data reference: Techjury.net). When the technology that museums use go mainstream it has both positive and negative impacts: prices go down while technology options go up at the same time the competition from mainstream media companies, including gaming and tourism increases.

Now COVID-19 has pulled most museums, some screaming and crying, on to the virtual reality bandwagon. Many museums were already providing virtual tours through Google Arts & Culture. This online platform has gained even more publicity during the lockdown. But as Museum Hack highlighted in April 2020, “Virtual Museum Tours Were Popular for 4 Days”. So, yes museums are adding VR to their offering but who is in charge and do they know what they are doing? Did anyone check who is the audience and what they are looking for? Are they doing it right and for that matter what is the right way to do it? Are they just throwing something up quick to make it seem like they care and failing and are there better ways to do it? How much should it cost, and should they do it in house or outsource part or all of it?

In this half day workshop, we will take a closer look, a virtual tour of virtual tours so to speak and explore examples from around the sector. We will review how VR allows museums to bring objects, scenes and stories to life making it easier for visitors to understand and put them in context. In addition to these positive benefits, we will review how many tours fail to leverage the technology and often ignore the visitors needs. We will explore what a tour virtual tour is, what could it be about… from physical spaces to intangible content to building museums and hosting events in virtual worlds. We will walk you through a couple of different ways to do it, from outsourcing the whole thing to DIY and from static tours to hybrid VR tours led by a tour guide. You will learn how much it costs and what combinations of equipment and software lets you do what parts of it yourself if you do it in house and what vendors can you outsource it to. We will explore the side benefits of this kind of documentation as well as all the pros and cons.

You will learn:
  • What is virtual reality?
  • What is a virtual tour?
  • How your museum can benefit from using virtual tours
  • How your visitors can benefit from virtual tours
  • Tools, content and processes required to create a virtual tour
  • How to capture 360 panoramic images
  • How to create a virtual tour on your own

This workshop is designed for museum professionals who are interested in both the practical and academic. Whether you own the virtual reality hardware and software and do it all in house or you want to outsource the whole thing and just review and post the final product, this workshop is for you. By the end of this workshop you will no longer need to rely on any experts to help you create a virtual tour. You will be able to create compelling virtual tours on your own, at the least possible expense.

Co-Presenters:
  • Rich Cherry, Founder and Managing Partner, Museum Operations
  • Hiroko Kusano, Managing Partner, Museum Operations
  • David London, Chief Experience Officer, The Peale Center, Baltimore

Speakers
avatar for Rich Cherry

Rich Cherry

Managing Partner, Museum Operations
Rich Cherry is the founder and managing partner at Museum Operations, a museum start-up, operations, technology, and construction management consultancy. Most recently, Rich was the deputy director of The Broad, an award-winning contemporary art museum in downtown Los Angeles. The... Read More →
avatar for Hiroko Kusano

Hiroko Kusano

Managing Partner, Museum Operations
Hiroko Kusano has more than 20 years in museum and non-profit management. Her diverse experience encompasses operations, curation, fundraising, membership, technology systems, events management, retail operations, marketing and social media, nonprofit and for-profit start-up strategy... Read More →
avatar for David London

David London

Chief Experience Officer, The Peale
I am the Chief Experience Officer at the Peale in Baltimore, MD, based in the oldest museum building in America. I come to this position after 20 years of dual career paths, split between non-profit arts administration, and working in "the show business", traveling the country as... Read More →


Wednesday November 18, 2020 2:00pm - 5:00pm EST
Deep Dive/Workshop Channel (limited space)
 
Thursday, November 19
 

11:30am EST

Open GLAM for Critical Open Educational Resources: Free Knowledge Pedagogy Via Intercultural Co-Curation

As the COVID-19 pandemic spread across the US and globally, people have moved even more online. Students and educators—from K-12 to graduate school—followed suit. Meanwhile, galleries, libraries, archives and museums (GLAM) shut their doors and tried to amplify virtual offerings to a public seeking entertainment as well as education from home. There is a lot of demand—and a lot of supply—in GLAM-related online educational resources (OER), as compiled by MCN and others. What works best, what is needed, and what will outlive lock-down? These are some of the questions that drive us into the future.

This workshop dives into how GLAM OER can collaborate with disciplines and fields across and beyond academia—from museum studies to geography, digital humanities to international relations, postcolonialism to decolonial epistemology. University faculty, students, and self-educating learners are seeking international arts and culture content that is free from colonial legacies, free from copyright, and free from cost. What role does open GLAM have in these pedagogical needs? What would interactive, engaging platforms look like that fostered intercultural dialogue and co-curation of Creative Commons and public domain arts and cultural content? What curricula are needed to help contextualize this content, and extricate it from Eurocentric taxonomies and appropriative metadata?

Deep Dive sign-ups open Wednesday, September 9. Space is limited and advance registration is required—so mark your calendars! Once sessions are filled, there will be a waitlist and MCN will notify attendees as spots become available.

Hello good people~! SO excited to share virtual space with you all Thursday morning and to learn from each other~! We have a *great* line-up of engaged, critical, smart, creative, generous thought-leaders joining us:
Featuring Adjoa Jones de Almeida Director of Education at Brooklyn Museum 
& Prof Namita Wiggers of Warren Wilson College & Critical Craft Forum 
& Virginia Poundstone, artist and digital curator
& scann Evelin Heidel, of OpenGLAM, tech feminist
& Curationist graduate fellows:

Francisca Rudolph
Magali Delgado
Andres de los Ríos
Jing Cui


Speakers
avatar for Garrett Graddy-Lovelace

Garrett Graddy-Lovelace

MHz Foundation Educational Projects & Partnerships, MHz Foundation
As Associate Professor at American University's School of International Service in Washington DC, Garrett Graddy-Lovelace researches and teaches agricultural, environmental, food, seed, land, and data policy from the perspectives of critical geography, feminist political ecology... Read More →


Thursday November 19, 2020 11:30am - 1:00pm EST
Deep Dive/Workshop Channel (limited space)
 
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