The latest from our team
How Time Got Away From Me, and How I Got it Back
I think about time a lot. As the owner of a small consulting company, I can’t help it. Questions like, “When do you need it?,” “Do we have time?,” or “How much time will that take?” are in regular rotation.
Expanding Accessibility in Museums: A Conversation with Christena Gunther
Christena Gunther, founder and president of Cultural Access Collaborative (formerly Chicago Cultural Accessibility Consortium), sat down with me to delve into what creating accessibility and inclusivity within museums and cultural institutions can look like.
Orientalism 101
As someone who has a background in anthropology and cultural studies, understanding orientalism is something that has become embedded in my approach to not only academic study, but to everyday life.
Is a Survey Really What You Need?
“Why don’t we just do a survey?” If I’ve heard it once, I’ve heard it a thousand times. Surveys are the first instinct for many museums seeking to learn about their audiences (and I’m sure the same is true across many industries).
How I Pursue Care Ethics in My Work
At this year’s National Art Education Association National Convention (NAEA), I presented (although not in person as intended) as part of a session called “The Ethics of Care: Love, Morals, and the Future of Museum Education.” As my former professor Dana Carlisle Kletchka described in our presentation, the Ethics of Care, or Care Ethics, is a philosophical approach to morals developed in the 1970s with feminist roots.
Making a Difference: Articulating Audience Outcomes
In our work at Kera, we often ask museum practitioners to articulate audience outcomes as a starting point for planning and evaluation. Audience outcomes are the difference a museum intends to make in its audiences’ lives through an experience (like an exhibition or a program).
Data-Driven Designed Experiences - Cathy Sigmond on Matters of Experience Podcast
Matters of Experience is a podcast about the creativity, innovation, and psychology driving designed experiences and encounters. In this episode, Cathy Sigmond chats with hosts Brenda Cowan and Abby Honor about how we use data and insights from human-centered research to help museums connect with their audiences and shape great visitor experiences.
The Benefits of Budget Transparency in RFPs
In recent years, the museum field, like much of the nonprofit world, has faced a reckoning when it comes to salary transparency and equity, sparking change across the industry.
5 Tips for Designing Digital Museum Content
Digital museum content, such as digital exhibitions, online collections, and interactive experiences, is an excellent way to engage visitors and allow them to explore topics in more detail and on their own time. For instance, the National Gallery of Art recently shared that its website traffic has doubled since launching its daily puzzle game Artle in May 2022. By providing a unique, interactive experience, the National Gallery of Art has successfully encouraged more visitors to explore the many collections and programs the museum has to offer.
How Many is “Many?”
When analyzing qualitative data, our end goal is always to provide a sense of how much or how little an idea or trend came up within the whole sample. Sometimes, it’s very clear—people either say “yes, I liked this” or “no, I didn’t like this,” and there were no overlapping reasons why. But most of the time, it’s less straightforward and more nuanced. We have to interpret what people say based on many factors.
Listen Up Museums! Black History Month Edition
February is Black History Month. And while the responsibility of acknowledging the often overlooked contributions of Black people and inequities they face is a daily endeavor, February offers us an annual opportunity for organizations (particularly predominantly white ones) to look inward and consider whether they are living up to their anti-racist ideals.
Telling a Story: A Case for Case Studies
In African American literature, my field of study, citation is pivotal practice—one of call and response. Throughout college and graduate school, my African American literature professors would turn toward us, their students, and pause. After a breath, they would all say something to this effect: “Citation is important. Why? Because you are calling on the ancestors, Black thinkers and leaders, before you. Their voices are often left out of the historical record. In your research, you must not forget the voices you have learned from.” Today, as I approach museum work, I take this lesson with me.
How Museums Can Harness TikTok To Diversify Their Audiences
With a majority of TikTok users belonging to Gen Z, the platform can be a great way to pull in younger, diverse audiences that may not be as involved in or aware of museum happenings. Yet, social media moves at a hyper fast pace, with new trends appearing every day and heavily saturated feeds. Understandably, getting started on TikTok may seem daunting.
A Cautionary Tale About Audiences and Assumptions
Most museums have a generalized notion of their audiences. They may broadly refer to “families,” “empty nesters,” “locals,” and “tourists.” But those broad categories tell us very little about what audiences value, care about, and believe in.
How You Know You’re Ready to Do Evaluation
Evaluating audiences’ experiences in a museum program, exhibition, or initiative, like most things, requires thoughtfulness and planning to be useful. But, when things get busy and deadlines loom, sometimes the last thing you want to do is slow down and consider why you are doing something.
What’s Going on Here? Considering the Anti-Racist Possibilities of Visual Thinking Strategies
This article, co-written by three art museum educators and Visual Thinking Strategies (VTS) coaches, explores VTS’ potential as an anti-racist teaching tool.
Can We Please Stop Saying that Museums are “Trusted”?
It’s been about a year since the American Alliance of Museums (AAM) and Wilkening Consulting published “Museums and Trust 2021.” The report states that museums continue to be regarded as “highly trustworthy.” This statement made me uncomfortable last year and continues to bother me now.
How Can Museums Respectfully Engage with their Looted Objects?
When visiting the Met earlier this year, I was especially interested in the Islamic art exhibitions. As I wandered through, trailing from South Asia to Ottoman Anatolia to Damascus, I was on the one hand in awe of how the Met had such a wide variety of items from these places, but on the other hand, distraught and angered by the objects on display.
Beyond The ADA: Creating Truly Disability-Friendly Museums
The fight for the Americans with Disabilities Act (the ADA) was long, hard, and demanding. Thanks to the incredibly taxing work of disabled activists for decades leading up to the eventual passing of the ADA in 1990, Americans with disabilities have more protections than ever before.
Going Undercover: 3 Ways We Unobtrusively Observe Visitors in Museum Exhibitions
Observations have always been one of my favorite ways to collect data. Watching how people move about and behave in a space is inherently addictive—there is so much you can discover if you pay close attention to what is happening around you, and it feels a bit like going undercover as a spy.