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Certificate Program in Museum
Scholarship and Material Culture
The
Certificate Program in Museum Scholarship and Material Culture augments
graduate work in American Studies, Anthropology, Historic Preservation,
and History by training students to understand the particular challenges,
issues, and opportunities encountered when conducting and presenting material
culture scholarship in the museum environment. The program takes advantage
of close collaboration with the world's largest museum establishment, the
Smithsonian Institution. Core courses are taken at the Smithsonian with
the participation of Smithsonian staff. The certificate aims to equip students
with skills for research, scholarship, and presentation that are appropriate
to museums of history, culture, and material life. It is not directed toward
museum administration or care of collections, nor does it deal directly
with issues specifically pertaining to art or natural science museums.
Students
in this twelve (12)-hour program will take a required core of three courses. The
first is an introductory seminar at the Smithsonian, in which general issues
of historical and material culture scholarship in museums are discussed
through readings, investigative projects, and site visits to specific exhibitions.
This course is followed by a research seminar in which students select
research topics drawing on museum resources at the Smithsonian or other
appropriate institutions, and prepare and present an extended study. The
third museum-based course is the program's practicum in which students
work closely with a museum curator or specialist on a research project
that demonstrates the student's mastery of museum materials and approaches.
The final course for the certificate
is a seminar in the student's home department that deals with major scholarly
issues in material culture, as approached by the home discipline. This
may include seminars in American material culture, the history of technology,
cultural resource management, ethnology, or cultural analysis.
The
Program
HIST
610/AMST 655: Introduction to Museum Scholarship (3 hrs.) Introduction
to key issues involved in the study of history and material culture in
museums, taught at the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.
Topics include the history of museums, the theory of collections, exhibition
strategies, and artifact-based research and controversies, both public
and scholarly, involving museum-based scholarship and presentation.
HIST
810/AMST 856: Museum Research Seminar (3 hrs.) Prerequisite: Introduction
to Museum Scholarship or permission of instructor In consultation with
seminar leaders from the university and the Smithsonian, students will
select research topics that investigate key issues in museum-based scholarship
and demonstrate their ability to research and prepare an extended research
project. The project will be presented publicly at the completion of the
seminar.
HIST
811/AMST 857: Museum Scholarship Practicum (3-6 hrs.) Prerequisite: Museum
Research Seminar or permission of instructor Students will devise and carry
out a research program using collections at the Smithsonian or another
approved institution, and will work under joint supervision of a Smithsonian
staff member and university faculty member.
The
fourth course will focus on material culture or closely-related studies
as pursued by the student's host discipline (e.g., ANTH 448P/689P, "Theories
of the Past," AMST 650, "Material Culture Studies Theory," or appropriate
offerings of HIST 609 in history of technology).
Additional
information can be obtained from the Certificate Program Director, Prof. Mary Corbin Sies (American Studies),
Phone: 301-405-1361, FAX: 301-314-9453, email:
sies@umd.edu.
Last updated:
August 28, 2006
Photos:
Top:
Box for revenue stamps, required by the Stamp Act in the years before the
American Revolution.
Middle:
Register submitted by S.F.B. Morse to accmpany patent application for electromagnetic
telegraph, 1840s.
Bottom:
Iron used by Irish immigrant family, Ipswich, Mass., 1930s
All
images, copyright, Smithsonian Institution.
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