Museum Studies Certificate Program

Museum Studies at Connecticut College is a broad interdisciplinary program, open to students of all majors,  that explores the role of museums in shaping society's knowledge about art, culture, history and the natural world. The Museum Studies Certificate Program is designed to introduce students to careers in all types of museums, cultural arts centers, historical sites and houses, science centers, environmental education centers, exhibit design firms, auction houses, planetaria, aquaria, zoos and botanical gardens. Students who successfully complete the program will receive a certificate at graduation.

The program offers:

•     An introduction to the foundations of museology with a critical perspective on museum history and practice.

•     An opportunity to visit and analyze a diverse range of museums and exhibitions.

•     Study of community-museum relationships through on-site observations and interaction with museum professionals.

•     Training in museum skills and operation, including curation, exhibition design and implementation, collection management, conservation, administration, publication, fundraising and educational programming.

•     Special opportunities for internships, volunteer work and training at local museums.

The program consists of four components: a foundation course, two elective courses, a summer or semester internship at a museum, gallery, historical society or related organization (approved by the Director of Museum Studies), and a  Senior Integrative Project.

Students may enter the museum studies program through first semester of the junior year.

Criteria for Entry into the Museum Studies Program:

•     Minimum 3.0 grade point average.

•     An academic plan approved by the director of Museum studies that includes elective courses to be taken, a proposed Museum intern­ship, and a faculty-approved topic/project for the Senior Integrative Project.

Criteria for the Certificate:

•     An overall 3.0 grade point average in foundation and elective courses.

•     Successful completion of foundation and elective courses.

•     Successful completion of a museum-related internship.

•     Successful completion of the Senior Integrative Project.

Certificate Components

Foundation Course

Two Electives

Chosen from the following:

ANT 112CC: MATERIAL LEGACIES

4

AHI 246NINETEENTH-CENTURY ART

4

AHI 250PERSPECTIVES ON PHOTOGRAPHY

4

AHI 260EARLY TWENTIETH-CENTURY ART

4

AHI 281/ANT 281CURRENT ISSUES MUSEUM STUDIES

4

AHI 283/EDU 283MUSEUM EDUCATION

4

AHI 284HOUSE MUSEUMS

4

AHI 286MUSEUM THEATER

4

ANT 330/CRE 330ANTHROPOLOGY OF TOURISM

4

AHI 455EXHIB VISUAL ART IN DIGITL AGE

4

AHI 456MUSEUM PROJECTS

4

ARC 471EXHIBIT NEW LNDN TIME CAPSULE

4

AHI 450BAD ART: LOOKING BEYOND CANON

4

Internship

A summer or semester internship at a museum, gallery, historical society or related organization (approved by the Director of Museum Studies)

Senior Integrative Project

An independent or collaborative project undertaken while enrolled in AHI 496:  Museum Studies Senior Projects.  The project is usually created with the guidance of a faculty member in one's major and with the Director of Museum Studies. The project might involve designing and implementing an exhibition, developing interactive computer software or a museum website, producing an educational outreach program, or writing a research essay on some aspect of museums or museology.

AHI 496/MSM 496MUSEUM STUDIES SENIOR PROJECT

4

Steiner, C.

Gonzalez Rice, K