Administration and Operationsin Tribal Museums

TMSD 362 - 5 credits

Instructor: Marilyn G. Jones

Address: PO Box 641 Suquamish WA 98392-0641

Contact: (360) 689 – 7215 Cell (360) 598 – 5494 Office Fax

Email:

Office hours: By appointment only(360) 394-8495 Office number

Suquamish Museum PO Box 498 Suquamish WA 98392-0498

15838 Sandy Hook Road Poulsbo WA 98370 (Street Address)

Course Description

Designed to acquaint students with the significant features of tribal museum administration. Professional museum best practices will be presented for each aspect of museum administration in the context of tribal museum operations.

Course Prerequisites:

ENGL 101 or permission of instructor.

Course Outcomes:

As a result of competing this course, students will be able to … / Instructional Activities: How will students master this outcome? / Assessment/Evaluation Strategies: How will this outcome be measured?
effectively communicate in diverse situations, from receiving to expressing information, both verbally and non-verbally (NWIC Insitutional Outcome) /

Written assignments, exams

/

Grades will be given on the clarity of written work the students turn from assignments and exams given in class

outline museum history and philosophy, including the development and current status of tribal museums. / Readings, lectures, guest presentations, class discussions and class activities, written assignments, exams. / Class participation, role plays, written assignments, exams, self-evaluation.
Describe tribal museums as legal institutions, both within and outside of tribal law. / Readings, lectures, guest presentations, class discussions and class activities, written assignments, exams. / Class participation, role plays, written assignments, exams, self-evaluation.
Provide an overview and examples of primary aspects of museum operations, including collections, security, insurance, access, education and exhibition, and community outreach. / Readings, lectures, guest presentations, class discussions and class activities, written assignments, exams. / Class participation, role plays, written assignments, exams, self-evaluation.
Provide an overview and examples of primary aspects of museum administration, including different types of museums and their basic organizational structures, trustees and other forms of community involvement and relationships, staffing, funding, financial planning, and facility issues. / Readings, lectures, guest presentations, class discussions and class activities, written assignments, exams. / Class participation, role plays, written assignments, exams, self-evaluation.

Course Requirements

30 % - participation

30 % - assignments

20 % - Mid-term exam

20 % - Final exam

Grading:

A - 100 – 90

B - 89 – 80

C - 79 – 70

D - 69 – 60

F - 59 - 0

Class Location

Suquamish Museum is located at 15838 Sandy Hook Road NE Poulsbo WA, coming from Seattle take the Bainbridge Island Ferry and follow HWY 305 toward Poulsbo, turn left on Sandy Hook Road and go down 1/8 of a mile and turn left at the large Suquamish Museum Logo Sign. From Kingston Ferry follow HWY 104 and turn left at the light by Albertsons, follow the road through Suquamish to HWY 305 and turn right, go ¾ mile to Sandy Hook Road and turn left on Sandy Hook Road, 1/8 mile down turn left at Suquamish Museum Logo Sign. From Bremerton, take HWY 303 to HWY 3 and then to HWY 305 and follow the directions above. From Hood Canal Bridge take HWY 104 to HWY 305 and follow the above directions.

Class Attendance

Attendance is required at all class sessions.

Class Participation

Discussions and open bookwork in order to share and facilitate learning about the best practices in museum administration will be done as much as possible. With possible role-playing of students as staff and director in various forms of daily work related activities and interactions with different types of problem solving topics. Guest speakers may be coming in to talk about various topics and your notes will be very important for tests.

Course Policies:

Cell phones may be used on breaks and lunch – during class please keep them off. Laptops may be used for note taking and sharing of information about your Tribal organizations.

Textbooks - These are the required texts for this course:

Gerald George and Cindy Sherrell-Leo - Starting Right: 1986. Nashville: AltaMira Press

ISBN # 0-7591-0557-X / 978-0-7591-0557-7

Hugh H. Genoways and Lynne M. Ireland – Museum Administration An Introduction AltaMira Press

ISBN # 0-7591-0294-5 / 978-0-7591-0294-1

Beverly Serrell - Exhibit Labels: An Interpretive Approach AltaMira Press

ISBN # 0-7619-9106-9 / 978-0-7619-9106-9

Additional materials will be distributed in class for various administrative types of the subjects discussed. You may also wish to review additional readings from the course bibliography during the course.

Course Schedule: Topics, Readings, Assignments

Week 1 – Defining the museum and other key terms

Assignment #1: Object Significance - due Oct. 14

Week 2 - Museum finances and financial planning, including sources of income.

Hand outs and assignment

Week 3 - Business plan: before creation of museum and review after museum is up

Mid-term test on Tuesday afternoon*

Assignment #2: Museum Design and Staffing

Week 4- The ethics of acquisition; basic legal principles, reading materials and handouts will be supplied

Assignment #3: Cataloging Exercise

Week 5 - Museum exhibition and education, hand outs and reading materials will be supplied

Week 6 - Laws, ethics, pitfalls and community relations. Hand outs and reading materials will be supplied

Final exam Tuesday afternoon*

Bibliography

I. WEB Sites

- American Assn. for State and Local History

- National Park Service, Cultural Resources

Art News magazine

an art law/exhibit/scandal service

National Trust for Historic Preservation

- Advisory Council on Historic Preservation

American Association of Museums

American Law Institute, American Bar Assn.

Western Museums Association

II. Periodicals

In addition to the sources listed in other sections, the following periodical publications carry news, reports, and articles that deal with museum legal and ethical concerns:

American Indian Art Magazine - periodical (NAGPRA column)

Anthropology Today - Royal Anthropological Institute (UK)

Art News - monthly periodical

Aviso - Newsletter of the American Association of Museums

CRM Magazine: Journal of Heritage Stewardship National Park Service

Curator - American Museum of Natural History

History News - American Association for State and Local History

ICOM News - International Council of Museums (Unesco)

Indian Trader - private newspaper

International Journal of Cultural Property Intl.Cult.Prop.Society

Muse (formerly Gazette) - Canadian Museums Association

Museum UNESCO

Museum Anthropology Council for Museum Anthropology, AAM

Museum News - American Association of Museums

III. General Works on Museum and Object Law

Cunningham, Richard B.

2005 Archaeology, Relics, and the Law. Dunham, NC: Carolina Academic Pr.

Gerstenblith, Patty

2004 Art, Cultural Heritage, and the Law. Durham, NC: Carolina Academic Pr.

King, Thomas F.

1998 Cultural Resource Laws and Practice. Nashville, TN: AASLH

Malaro, Marie C.

1985 A Legal Primer on Managing Museum Collections. Wash.DC: Smithsonian Inst.

IV. Ethical Issues and Codes

Edson, Gary (ed)

1997 Museum Ethics. Routeledge: London

International Council of Museums

2002 ICOM Code of Ethics for Museums.

Vitelli, Karen D. (ed)

1996 Archaeological Ethics. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Pr.

V. Museum Administration

Adams, Roxana (ed)

2002 Foundations of Museum Governance for Private, Nonprofit Museums. AAM

Anderson, Gail (ed)

1998 Museum Mission Statements. AAM

Dubberly, Sara (ed)

2001 Organizing Your Museum: The Essentials. AAM

Fischer, Daryl K. (ed)

1997 Museums, Trustees, and Communities. AAM

Karp, Ivan; et. al. (eds)

1992 Museums and Communities: The Politics of Public Culture. Wash.DC: Smithsonian

Inst.Pr.

Kurtz, Daniel

2001 Managing Conflicts of Interest: Practical Guidelines for Nonprofit Boards.

Boardsource

Jordan, Ronad R. and Katelyn L. Quynn

1999 Planned Giving: Management, Marketing, and Law. Wiley and Sons

Leifer, Jacqueline C. and Michael B. Glomb

1992 The Legal Obligations of Nonprofit Boards. Boardsource

Lord, Barry and Gail D.

1991The Manual of Museum Planning. London: HMSO

Lord, Barry and Gail D.

1997 The Manual of Museum Management. London: StationeryOffice

Malaro, Marie C.

1994 Museum Governance: Mission, Ethics, Policy. Wash.DC: Smithsonian Inst.Pr.

Salmen, John

1998 Everyone's Welcome: Americans with Disabilities Act and Museums. AAM

VI. Curatorial Work

Pearce, Susan M.

1990 Archaeological Curatorship. Wash.DC: Smithsonian Inst.Press

Kavanagh, Gaynor

1990 History Curatorship. Wash.DC: Smithsonian Inst.Pr

VII. Conservation Issues

Bachmann, Konstanze

1992 Conservation Concerns: A Guide for Collectors and Curators. Wash.DC: Smithsonian

Inst.Pr.

Florian, Mary-Lou E., Dale Paul Kronkright, and Ruth E. Norton

1990The Conservation of Artifacts Made from Plant Materials. Marina del Rey, CA: The Getty

Conservation Institute.

MacLeish, A. Bruce

1986 The Care of Antiques and Historical Collections. Nashville, TN: AASLH

Story, Keith

1985 Approaches to Pest Management in Museums. Suitland, MD:

Conservation Analytical Laboratory, SmithsonianInstitution.

[Canadian Conservation Institute - Technical Bulletins:]

#1 - K.J. Macleod, Relative Humidity: Its Importance, Measurement, and Control in Museums.

#2 - K.J. Macleod, Museum Lighting.

#3 - R.H. Lafontaine, Recommended Environmental Monitors for Museums, Archives and Art Galleries.

#7 - R.H. Lafontaine and Patricia A. Wood, Fluorescent Lamps.

[The American Association for State and Local History Technical Leaflet Series:]

#005 - Storing Your Collections: Problems and Solutions.

#171 - A Holistic Approach to Museum Pest Management.

Thomson, Garry

1986 The Museum Environment. NY: Butterworth

Clavir, Miriam

2002 Preserving What is Valued: Museums, Conservation, and First Nations. UBC Museum

of Anthropology Research Publication. Vancouver, BC: UBC Pr.

Fahey, Anne

1994 Collections Management. NY: Routledge

Mibach, Lisa and Sarah Wolf Green

1989 Sacred Objects and Museum Conservation: Kill or Cure? In, The Concept of Sacred

Materials and Their Place in the World. ed. George Horse Capture. Cody: Buffalo

Bill Historical Center.

VIII. Personnel Issues

AAMD

1996 Model Museum Director's Employment Contract. Assoc. of Art Mus.Directors

Cutler, Charlene et al.

1996 The Employer's Handbook: A Guide to Personnel Practices and Policies for

Museums. New England Museum Assn.

Kuyper, Joan

1991 How to Manage a Museum Volunteer Program. American Council for the Arts.

Roosa, Alexandra M.

2002 The AAM Guide to Writing an Employee Handbook. WashDC: AAM

IX. Registration

Buck, Rebecca and Jean Allman Gilmore (eds)

1998 The New Museum Registration Methods. WashDC: AAM

Case, Mary (ed)

1988 Registrars on Record: Essays on Museum Collections Management. Wash.DC: AAM

Dudley, Dorothy H. et al.

1979Museum Registration Methods. WashDC: AAM

1980

Reibel, Daniel B.

1978 Registration Methods for the Small Museum. Nashville, TN: AASLH

Weil, Stephen E. (ed)

1997 A Deaccession Reader. Wash. DC: AAM

XI. NAGPRA

American Anthropological Association

1991 Reburial Commission Report. Anthropology Newsletter 32(3):1, 26. (March)

1988 AAM Policy Regarding the Repatriation of Native American Ceremonial Objects and

Human Remains. Aviso (March): 4-5.

American Association of Museums

1987 Statement of AAM to Senate Select Committee on The Native American Cultural

Preservation Act, S.187. Washington, D.C.: Amer.Assoc. of Museums.

1988 AAM Policy Regarding the Repatriation of Native American Ceremonial Objects and

Human Remains. Aviso (March): 4-5.

1993 Native American Collections and Repatriation. AAM

2001 Implementing the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act. AAM

Anon.

1979 American Indian Religious Freedom Act, P.L.95-341. Coun.Mus.Anthro.N'Ltr. 3(3):

5-6.

Barkan, Elazar and Ronald Bush (eds)

2002 Claiming the Stones, Naming the Bones: Cultural Property and the Negotiation

of National and Ethnic Identity. LA: Getty Inst.

Department of Interior

1993 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act Regulations. Federal

Register, V.58(102): 31122-31134.

Fine-Dare, Kathleen S.

2002 Grave Injustice: The American Indian Repartriation Movement and NAGPRA.

Lincoln, Neb: U.Neb.Pr.

Mihesuah, Devon A. (ed)

2000 Repatriation Reader: Who Owns American Indian Remains? Lincoln, NEB: U.Neb. Pr.

Nason, James D.

1997 Beyond Repatriation: Issues of Cultural Policy and Practice for the 21st Century. In,

Borrowed Power:Essays in Cultural Appropriation, ed. by B. Ziff and

P. Rao. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press

United States

1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, Public Law 101-601,

November 16, 1990. 101st Congress.

XII. Intellectual Property Rights

Brush, Stephen B and Doreen Sabinsky (eds)

1996Valuing Local Knowledge: Indigenous People and Intellectual Property Rights.

Wash.DC: Island Press

Greaves, Tom (ed)

1994 Intellectual Property Rights for Indigenous Peoples: A Sourcebook. Okla.City: Society

for Applied Anthropology

Grenier, Louise

1998 Working with Indigenous Knowldge: A Guide for Researchers. International

Development Research Centre: Ottawa

Nason, James D.

1996Native American Intellectual Property Rights: Issues in the Control of Esoteric

Knowledge. In, Borrowed Power: Essays on Cultural Appropriation, ed. by B.Ziff and P.

Rao. New Brunswick, NJ:Rutgers University Press

1996Tribal Models for Controlling Research. Tribal College (Journal of American Indian

Higher Education), Vol. VIII (2): 17-20.

2001Traditional Property and Modern Laws: The Need for Native American Community

Intellectual Property Rights Legislation. Stanford Law and Policy Review, Volume 12(2): 255-266 (Special Issue: The State of Native America and Its Unfolding Self-

Governance.

Native American Rights Fund

1979 Suppression of American Indian Culture and Religious Activities by Federal Policy.

Council of Museum Anthropology Newsletter 3(3):7-10.

Stephenson, David J.

1994 A Legal Paradigm for Protecting Traditional Knowledge. In, Intellectual Property Rights

for Indigenous Peoples, edited by Tom Greaves. Oklahoma City, OK: Society for Applied

Anthropology.

Ziff, Bruce and Pratima V. Rao (eds)

1997 Borrowed Power: Essays on Cultural Appropriation. Ruters University

Press: New Brunswick, N J

XIII. Finances, Financial Administration and Tax Law

Jordan, Ronald R. and Katelyn L. Quynn

1999 Planned Giving: Management, Marketing and Law. NY: Wiley

McLean, Fiona

1997 Marketing the Museum. Routledge: London, NY

XIV. Exhibition

Grinder, Alison L. and E. Sue McCoy

1985 The Good Guide: A Sourcebook for Interpreters, Docents, and Tour Guides. Ironwood

Neal, Arminta

1976 Exhibits for the Small Museum. Nashville, TN: AASLH

Witteborg, Lothar P.

1981 Good Show! A Practical Guide for Temporary Exhibitons. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Pr.

XVI. Museum Design

Brown, Catherine R., et al.

1989Building for the Arts: A Guidebook for the Planning and Design of Cultural Facilities. Santa

Fe, NM: Western States Arts Federation

Darragh, Joan and James S. Snyder

1993 Museum Design. London: Oxford Univ. Press

Lord, Barry and Gail (eds)

1991 The Manual of Museum Planning. London: HMSO

Matthews, Geoff

1991 Museums and Art Galleries: A Design and Development Guide. NY: Butterworth

XVII. Museum Security

International Council of Museums

1993 Museum Security and Protection. NY: Routledge

Lord, Allyn et al.

1994Steal This Handbook! A Template for Creating a Museum's Emergency Preparedness Plan.

Columbia, SC: Southeastern Registrars Association

[The American Association for State and Local History Technical

Leaflet Series:]

#114 - Emergency Preparedness for Museums, Historic Sites, and Archives: An Annotated Bibliography.

#083 - Security for Museums and Historic Houses: An Annotated Bibliography.

XVIII. Community Relations/Volunteers

Kuyper, Joan

1991 How to Manage a Museum Volunteer Program. American Council for the Arts.

Karp, Ivan; et. al. (eds)

1992 Museums and Communities: The Politics of Public Culture. Wash.DC: Smithsonian Inst.Pr.