Museums

You might consider creating an account so that your contributions will be attributed to your name.

Wenn Sie ein Benutzerkonto einrichten (Warum ein Benutzerkonto erstellen?), werden Ihre Beiträge Ihrem Namen zugeordnet.

READ MORE

Museums
Process

Part-time graphic novelist...

I chose the National Museum of the American Indian as the subject of my month-long investigation into Museum Informatics, because I just spent three years teaching Native American teenagers in New Mexico. Ellis Island was my other potential research location, as I want to see my great-grandparents' names on the wall, but free admission and being open every day didn't hurt NMAI on the pro/con list. The real answer, however, is that the Smithsonian's foray into creating a culturally-focused institution is something an African & African-American Studies major from Dartmouth can't resist. They are going to build an African-American museum within the next five years, so a window into NMAI is worth looking in.

The more time that I spent investigating this particular museum, the more it helped me figure out the direction I would like to take with my library career as well. Museum education is a natural temptation, and I am also interested in making websites and designing videogames - in being the techy sci-fi librarian of the future... But I am still intimidated by IT. However, I have been using a computer since the TI-99/4a, and I think I am finally realizing that I can build a bridge from humanities to computer science through librarianship and information science; the more I learn about using ICT to apply the Five Laws of Library Science, the better a humanties scholar I will be in the 21st century.

I am impressed with the amount of technology that the Smithsonian already uses. They are obviously leaders in most of the communities of practice they belong to. I was disappointed with the amount of human remains that they have yet to return since NMAIA. I read the criticism for and against the museum and tried to report objectively based on the questions that were asked in class, but I do worry that my words online will have a meaning that I didn't intend, or be interpreted as a blanket endorsement for the Smithsonian. Also, I can't help but wonder how the national museum will tell the (his)tory of African-Americans.

During the two weeks that we were in class, I completed several pages of analysis of the museum's use of information technology, and at times I was overwhelmed because the Smithsonian offers a lot. Some of the pages, in the end, remain bulleted points and others were fleshed out completely with slideshows, links, and images. When I got the message that several of my pages were "orphans", I tried to respond as quickly as I could. Like worrying about the interpretation of the NMAI information I present here, I also worry about the presentation of my work online. Even now that the course has come to an end, I know that I will find myself editing these pages over and over again, because they are associated with me and now they are out there in public. As I inferred earlier, in order to be 21st century academic I will have to become okay with having an online presence. I plan to be a digital humanities scholar.