Supporting the MSU MUSEUM

Similar documents
GREAT Britain: Film Brief

Leisure and Tourism. Content

Close Up. washington, Dc High School Programs

David Livingstone Centre. Job Description. Project Documentation Officer

Swinburne University of Technology 2020 Plan

Michigan State University

Texas Woman s University Libraries

ARTS ADMINISTRATION CAREER GUIDE. Fine Arts Career UTexas.edu/finearts/careers

THE IMPACT OF YOUR GIVING 2015 ENDOWMENT REPORT

University of Delaware Library STRATEGIC PLAN

Close Up. washington & Williamsburg High School Programs

Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (NAMA) Director of Education and Interpretive Programs

OVERVIEW Getty Center Richard Meier Robert Irwin J. Paul Getty Museum Getty Research Institute Getty Conservation Institute Getty Foundation

People: Past and Present

ATHLETIC ENDOWMENT FUND MOUNTAINEER ATHLETIC CLUB

Copyright Corwin 2014

FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

Change Your Life. Change The World.

University of Michigan Dean, School of Information

Europeana Creative. Bringing Cultural Heritage Institutions and Creative Industries Europeana Day, April 11, 2014 Zagreb

BPS Information and Digital Literacy Goals

Participatory Research and Tools

Improving the impact of development projects in Sub-Saharan Africa through increased UK/Brazil cooperation and partnerships Held in Brasilia

Mission Statement Workshop 2010

Jordan Duty Free Profile. A Warm Welcome

Harness the power of public media and partnerships for the digital age. WQED Multimedia Strategic Plan

Shared Leadership in Schools On-line, Fall 2008 Michigan State University

INTERNATIONAL ENGLISH PROGRAMS INFORMATION BOOKLET UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO NEW COLLEGE

Positive turning points for girls in mathematics classrooms: Do they stand the test of time?

Fearless Change -- Patterns for Introducing New Ideas

FROM THE DEPARTMENT CHAIR

Finding the Sweet Spot: The Intersection of Interests and Meaningful Challenges

University of Plymouth. Community Engagement Strategy

COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT

International Baccalaureate (IB) Primary Years Programme (PYP) at Northeast Elementary

ASTEN Fellowship report Priscilla Gaff Program Coordinator Life Science

The Role of School Libraries in Elementary and Secondary Education

Meek School of Journalism and New Media Will Norton, Jr., Professor and Dean Mission. Core Values

Deans, Chairpersons, and Directors

Biomedical Sciences (BC98)

Mission: We prepare our students for life, work and citizenship in the twentyfirst

Strategic Plan SJI Strategic Plan 2016.indd 1 4/14/16 9:43 AM

OFFICE OF ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT. Annual Report

An Introduction to LEAP

Mathematics subject curriculum

Wide Open Access: Information Literacy within Resource Sharing

Testimony to the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions. John White, Louisiana State Superintendent of Education

Practitioner s Lexicon What is meant by key terminology.

African American Studies Program Self-Study. Professor of History. October 9, 2015

JAMES PEPPER HENRY. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON Eugene, Oregon BA, Fine Arts, 1988

Layne C. Smith Education 560 Case Study: Sean a Student At Windermere Elementary School

Dakar Framework for Action. Education for All: Meeting our Collective Commitments. World Education Forum Dakar, Senegal, April 2000

Nunavut Culture on Cloth: Traditional Wall Hangings from Baker Lake

CHESTER FRITZ AUDITORIUM REPORT


Beyond PDF. Using Wordpress to create dynamic, multimedia library publications. Library Technology Conference, 2016 Kate McCready Shane Nackerud

The Palm Beach Museum of Natural History. Boynton Beach Historic High School Project Proposal. December 2011

THE ECONOMIC IMPACT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF EXETER

Literacy THE KEYS TO SUCCESS. Tips for Elementary School Parents (grades K-2)

JICA s Operation in Education Sector. - Present and Future -

Davidson College Library Strategic Plan

LANGUAGES, LITERATURES AND CULTURES

4. Templates TO PROMOTE YOUR EVENT

The Ohio State University Library System Improvement Request,

of DoDDS Pacific/DDESS Guam) Inspiring &preparing our students for success in a global environment. Department of Defense Education Activity: DoDEA

Understanding Co operatives Through Research

UCB Administrative Guidelines for Endowed Chairs

BLACKBOARD & ANGEL LEARNING FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS. Introduction... 2

HIS/IAR 627: Museum and Historic Site Interpretation

November 6, Re: Higher Education Provisions in H.R. 1, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act. Dear Chairman Brady and Ranking Member Neal:

Community Rhythms. Purpose/Overview NOTES. To understand the stages of community life and the strategic implications for moving communities

Date: 9:00 am April 13, 2016, Attendance: Mignone, Pothering, Keller, LaVasseur, Hettinger, Hansen, Finnan, Cabot, Jones Guest: Roof

The Chair's Chatter. Bethke, Donna. September 20, UM SOM PTRS Sent: From: Wednesday, September 20, :02 PM To:

Beyond Classroom Solutions: New Design Perspectives for Online Learning Excellence

Higher education is becoming a major driver of economic competitiveness

WORK OF LEADERS GROUP REPORT

Department of Sociology and Social Research

Testimony in front of the Assembly Committee on Jobs and the Economy Special Session Assembly Bill 1 Ray Cross, UW System President August 3, 2017

PROPOSED MERGER - RESPONSE TO PUBLIC CONSULTATION

RAISING ACHIEVEMENT BY RAISING STANDARDS. Presenter: Erin Jones Assistant Superintendent for Student Achievement, OSPI

Practices Worthy of Attention Step Up to High School Chicago Public Schools Chicago, Illinois

Innovation that Matters

Teacher of Psychology and Health and Social Care


HIGHER EDUCATION IN POLAND

Authentically embedding Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander peoples, cultures and histories in learning programs.

Robert S. Marx Law Library University of Cincinnati College of Law Annual Report: *

Proficiency Illusion

Gehlen Catholic School & Gehlen Catholic Schools Endowment Fund. Romans 12: Capital Campaign

The Implementation of a Consecutive Giving Recognition Program at the University of Florida

Master of Science (MS) in Education with a specialization in. Leadership in Educational Administration

What Teachers Are Saying

Maynooth University Study Abroad in Ireland

UNESCO Bangkok Asia-Pacific Programme of Education for All. Embracing Diversity: Toolkit for Creating Inclusive Learning-Friendly Environments

The Civil War Turning Points In The East: The Battle Of Antietam And The Battle Of Gettysburg [Kindle Edition] By Charles River Editors

An Industrial Technologist s Core Knowledge: Web-based Strategy for Defining Our Discipline

Building a Vibrant Alumni Network

U VA THE CHANGING FACE OF UVA STUDENTS: SSESSMENT. About The Study

Capitalism and Higher Education: A Failed Relationship

Educational system gaps in Romania. Roberta Mihaela Stanef *, Alina Magdalena Manole

Transcription:

Supporting the MSU MUSEUM

Exciting Minds While many people think of a museum as collections and exhibitions, it s much more than that. At the MSU Museum, our mission is to excite minds about science, culture, and our shared future. LORA HELOU ACTING DIRECTOR, MSU MUSEUM

At the End of the Day The MSU Museum has a distinguished history, and within the expanding story of Michigan State University, the MSU Museum is writing its own chapter. We seek to excite the minds of our audiences. Our goal is to create meaningful and engaging experiences about culture, science, and the most challenging issues facing our world. University museums such as ours now play multiple and complex roles: providing an entry point to MSU, serving students and scholars on campus and worldwide, piquing the interest of children into fields of study and eventual careers, and meeting expectations of a wide range of visitors. MSU is a university on the rise, and the MSU Museum must rise with it. With your support, we will transform a museum with century-old roots, into an institution that will fulfill its potential in the twenty-first century and beyond. LORA HELOU ACTING DIRECTOR, MSU MUSEUM

Experiences Unlike Any Other For more than 150 years, the MSU Museum has cared for the natural and cultural heritage of the people of Michigan, linking with the community through public programs and research. Our exhibits connect people with the past and with new experiences, knowledge, and ideas. The museum is a hub for discussion and debate, a unique institution revealing the best of the past, while helping shape the best of the future. In a world inundated with digital images of almost everything, the magic of experiencing the world and its treasures in real time endures a Civil War uniform, a natural wonder such as a ten-foot tall brown bear, Ethiopian textiles, or something else so striking that it stops visitors in their tracks. The MSU Museum contains one of the more diverse and important university museum collections in the country. Over one million items in the collections are studied by researchers at MSU and around the world. The collections are also the impetus of ideas the intersection of cultural heritage, creativity, science, history, and the arts.

Connecting Ideas and Audiences The MSU Museum envisions exciting the minds of the broadest possible audiences by revealing the richness of our shared cultures, the diversity of the world we live in, and the significance of MSU research changing the world. We are focused on connecting the people of Michigan with their heritage, history, culture, environment, and their future. We seek to be an integral gateway to MSU, providing the public with an introduction to the university and a platform to champion research done at MSU. We will create meaningful experiences that engage and delight all ages. We will connect with MSU students and citizens everywhere to share different perspectives, heighten understanding, and promote problem-solving. To do this, the MSU Museum will be a force for creativity, discovery, and learning by presenting information to a broad range of audiences in ways that engage and inspire. Connecting people to the leading academic work of MSU will promote the building of vibrant communities.

Support for the MSU Museum Items that were given to this museum 150 years ago are still used for scholarship and exhibitions. Gifts of endowment made today will be working 150 years from now and beyond to support the mission of the museum and the university. The MSU Museum seeks to raise $5.5 million in the campaign. We will achieve this goal with a mix of endowment, annual funds, and in-kind contributions. Endowment resources are critical because they provide permanent funding for the museum and its work on which we and our users can count year after year. A gift of endowment enables a donor s impact to last forever. For example, establishing an endowed curator of history position ensures that we can attract and retain first-class museum professionals in that important subject in perpetuity. Annual contributions, in contrast, provide vital current use funds we can put to work immediately for exhibits and programs. While endowment funds last forever that s why they are so highly sought and can spin off income averaging five percent of their principal each year, so as to retain their purchasing power in perpetuity. This means that a very generous $1 million endowment gift will produce $50,000 in income in its first year and incrementally more in subsequent years. A $1 million gift in current use funds, however, can make a big difference quickly something a donor can see and appreciate. In-kind donations include contributions of significant objects to the MSU Museum, strengthening collections and their impact in coursework, research, and educational programs via exhibits and online projects.

TO PROVIDE MORE OPPORTUNITIES THAT STRENGTHEN OUR GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE, OUR FUNDING GOAL IS $3 MILLION. ENDOWED EXHIBIT AND EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMING $1.1 MILLION ENDOWED CURATOR POSITION IN HISTORY $1.9 MILLION

A Force for CREATIVITY, DISCOVERY, AND LEARNING The MSU Museum offers an accessible and welcoming showplace in which to display our collections and the scholarly work of the university. Comprehensive natural science collections and the university s most extensive and diverse cultural collections offer fascinating opportunities for exhibits, educational opportunities, and research. Thousands of people benefit from the MSU Museum. Beyond the Museum walls at any time, six to nine traveling exhibits from the Museum are on the road at small museums, schools, and community centers these exhibits share knowledge and discovery in creative and engaging ways. MSU students use our collections in their coursework to enhance and expand their understanding of the natural world, human creativity, and expression. Our collections are the basis of active research by museum staff, MSU faculty and students, and scholars around the world. While our future will always include collections, we are about ideas more than objects. We are presently exploring new ways of learning and sharing MSU s vast knowledge with the world, using the rapid advances of communications and digital technology to connect new audiences to our wealth of subjects and ideas. MSU students are an essential element in these efforts, receiving training to become the next generation of museum professionals. We will be their learning laboratory, a place to study and refine the special ways museums operate as informal learning centers for all types of audiences. For MSU, its science and culture museum is an ideal place to present the research and scholarship of the university. In a time when the extent of public support of education is questioned, the museum serves as a constant display of MSU s value and importance.

A Vibrant COMMUNITY Exhibits offer visitors a platform for engagement and a point of intersection on which we can build community on the MSU campus, in Michigan, or through digital technology with people around the world. Moreover, community events such as the Great Lakes Folk Festival, Darwin Discovery Day, and the MSU Federal Credit Union Dinosaur Dash bring people together to discover and learn. The MSU Museum is a natural hub for discussion, debate, and understanding. We challenge visitors to reflect and make new connections, often in surprising ways. Accredited by the American Association of Museums, this is a place that encourages children s exploration and promotes scholarly inquiry. Not only do we inform people about scientific research and its results, but we engage them in the very process of discovery and critical thinking so as to enhance their understanding of and appreciation for the scientific method. While any museum can offer answers, the best museum experiences inspire curiosity and ignite questions. As a university museum, we serve as a champion of the important work done at MSU. Recently, Pamodzi: Africa + MSU, A Future in Partnership was a popular exhibit that vividly presented MSU s engagement in Africa via medicine, education, agriculture, the environment, the arts and humanities, and more. Projects like this make the museum an inviting gateway to MSU and, for some visitors, a critical first step to higher education. Every year, boys and girls who tour our halls may later become the first person in their families to go to college. Other young people will find that their life s work was first sparked by something they encountered in our museum.

OUR FUNDING GOAL FOR A VIBRANT COMMUNITY IS $2.5 MILLION. CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE COLLECTIONS $1.5 MILLION ANNUAL GIVING $1 MILLION

THE MSU MUSEUM SEEKS A TOTAL FUNDING GOAL OF $5.5 MILLION.

MSU MUSEUM DEVELOPMENT OFFICE 409 W. Circle Dr., Room 103 East Lansing, MI 48824 (517) 355-2371 jamesan@msu.edu COVER IMAGE: Founded in 1857, the Michigan State University Museum is the first collection-holding unit on campus, and Michigan s first Smithsonian Institution affiliate. The main exhibition building features three floors with 15 galleries and exhibit spaces for collections and research, new and recent acquisitions, MSU faculty work and experimental student projects. The space periodically hosts traveling exhibits on loan from other museums.