Museum Studies at Tufts University

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Collections Internship Opportunity – Royall House & Slave Quarters

Cummings Collections Fellowship

The purpose of the Cummings Collections Fellowship is to develop and populate a PastPerfect database of the objects in the Royall House and Slave Quarters collection and include any documentation that will help determine loan or ownership status, restrictions, provenance, and condition. In the process, any objects stored in unsafe conditions will be rehoused.

Stipend for 2019 is $5,000.

Hours are flexible, approximately 250 hours.

The collection of household furnishings at the Royall House and Slave Quarters is comprised of individual gifts, purchases, abandoned loans, and a single large bequest of furniture. The records for the collection are uneven; there is little information about the history of any object unless a written record is physically attached to it by means of a note card, tag, or label. Additional documentation includes inventories, appraisals, information from board meeting minutes starting in 1906, and uncatalogued correspondence with past donors. A modern inventory of the collection was started in 2004 and most objects have been tagged with a new inventory number. There are approximately 750 objects in the collection.

Qualifications: Knowledge of collections management practices and experience with PastPerfect or a similar database.

How to apply: Send resume and cover letter to President@RoyallHouse.org.

The Royall House and Slave Quarters is a museum in Medford, Massachusetts. In the eighteenth century, the Royall House and Slave Quarters was home to the largest slaveholding family in Massachusetts and the enslaved Africans who made their lavish way of life possible.

Weekly Job Roundup!

April showers bring May graduates! Find your future now with the job posts for the week of April 14.

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Why we should look towards the hospitality industry to improve visitor experience

This post was written in collaboration with second year Museum Education M.A. student Taylor Fontes

When moving to the Greater Boston Area to pursue my Masters degree in Museum Education, I made a hard decision. I chose to continue working in restaurants (a job I’ve done since I was a teenager) instead of pursuing a position at a local museum. I made this decision because restaurant work is a great way to make fast cash. As I move forward into a career in which that will no longer be the case, I wanted to start off strong with as little debt as possible and ample time to complete my course work. Sometimes, I have struggled with this choice as it has meant there is a gap in my resume when it comes to museum work. However, I have recently realized how important working in the hospitality industry has been to my experience in museums. So many of the skills I have learned in hospitality are transferrable to skills needed in museums. I firmly believe that these hospitality skills have strongly informed my ability to provide positive visitor experiences in museum environments.

When Taylor brought up the idea for this post she came from almost the opposite perspective. While she had been working in visitor service positions for a long time, she was new to the restaurant industry. Quickly however, she began to be referred to as a “rock star hostess.” So how did Taylor pick up the restaurant brand of hospitality so quickly? For her, it was so similar to the type of experience she strived to provide for visitors in museums she has worked in.

As museums become more visitor-centered and less object-centered it is important for us to see ourselves as institutions of hospitality. We can look towards the hospitality industry to help inform our practices within the museum. So what are our biggest takeaways?

  1. The vocabulary we use matters: Most hospitality focused restaurants don’t refer to their patrons as customers. It is too transactional. We focus on our guests. Guests are those that we invite in, they are wanted, accommodated, and catered too. In museums we need to think of our visitors as guests as well.
  2. First impressions are everything: From the atmosphere, to the signage, to the person greeting you. In a restaurant, the host/hostess is your first point of contact. They will set the tone for your entire experience, so friendly and personable staff are a must. But what about museums? Is there someone to greet visitors? Are the visitor service staff responsive? What is the tone we are setting?
  3. Restaurants know how to sell their product: Hospitality industry professionals have a lot of experience in selling their product. From the restaurant itself to up-selling the food and drink, this takes lots of knowledge of not just the products but of the audience as well. We need to know our audiences and understand what they want out of their experience. As we know, there are many different types of visitors with varying needs.
  4. Flexibility: Not all guests are looking for the same experience. We have to be flexible and fluid in order to provide satisfying and enriching experiences to a diverse audience. The same approach will not work with a group of millennials out for drinks that will work with an older couple having lunch. The same is true for museum visitors.
  5. Steps of service: Restaurants have very defined steps of service that guide our guests experiences. This does not in turn mean there is no free-choice within it. However, by creating these steps of service restaurants are able to be flexible while still provide superior service. Many museums think about visitor flow when designing exhibits. Creating steps of service within a museum experience can help us to better serve our visitors.
  6. Empathy and Tolerance: Restaurant professionals are highly experienced in empathy and tolerance. While we may use these words differently in the museum field. It is important as museum professionals that we don’t just teach empathy and tolerance but that we live it. In order to provide positive visitor experiences it is important that we can empathize with our visitors to better understand their needs as well as be tolerant to those that have different needs.
  7. The human connection: Hospitality professionals are experienced in creating personal connections in short periods of time. We talk to people from many different walks of life on a daily basis and if we want them to return it is important to create those connections. This, to me, is the biggest transferrable skill to the museum field. We want our visitors to make personal connections to what we are presenting. If museum professionals are not adept in making those connections how can they design and implement experiences that do. These social skills are so important.
  8. Ability to anticipate visitor needs: It is so important in both restaurants and museums for staff to be able to anticipate our guests and visitors needs before they can verbalize, or even know, what those needs are. These can be as basic as providing easily accessible bathrooms and comfortable seating or more complex such as providing for guests with disabilities. We need to anticipate everything our visitors may need when designing programming and exhibitions.

While this is just a short list there are many more things that museums can learn from restaurants as museums become more and more visitor focused.

WEEKLY JOB ROUNDUP!

Week of April 9th! Take a peek at the latest national jobs roundup!

Northeast

Public Programming Assistant [Fruitlands Museum- Harvard, MA]

Head of Public Programs [The Clark Art Institute- Williamstown, MA]

Exhibit Designer [Harvard Museums of Science and Culture- Cambridge, MA]

Assistant Museum Preparator [Mount Holyoke- South Hadley, MA]

Museum Educator and Docent Program Supervisor [Wellin Museum- Clinton, NY]

Programs Project Coordinator [Connecticut Science Center- Hartford, CT]

Museum Assistant [Natick Historical Society- Natick, MA]

Mid-Atlantic

Museum Education Specialist II [Space Telescope Science Institute- Baltimore, MD]

Senior Advancement Program Specialist [National Museum of African American History and Culture- Washington, D.C.]

Public Programs and Outreach Manager [Samek Art Museum- Lewisburg, PA]

Education and Program Coordinator [National Museum of Industrial History- Bethlehem, PA]

Southeast

Exhibition Designer [High Museum of Art- Atlanta, GA]

Director of Museum Planning and Operations [International African American Museum- Charleston, SC]

Coordinator of Youth and Community Programs [High Museum of Art- Atlanta, GA]

Midwest

Manager of Curatorial and Exhibits [Harley-Davidson Museum- Milwaukee, WI]

Senior Museum Content Developer [Hilferty and Associates- Athens, OH]

Teen and Community Programs Manager [Ohio State University- Columbus, OH]

Curatorial Assistant [Denver Art Museum- Denver, CO]

Director of Education [Spurlock Museum- Urbana, IL]

Manager of School Programs [Museum of Contemporary Art- Chicago, IL]

Specialist, Interpretation and Digital Learning [Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art- Kansas City, MO]

West

Volunteer Coordinator [Thanksgiving Point Institute- Lehi, UT]

Collections Specialist [Bowman Museum of Crook County- Prineville, OR]

Director of Collections [Nordic Museum-Seattle, WA]

Weekly Job Roundup!

Happy First Week of April! Do you have a job lined up for summer? Take a peek at the latest national jobs roundup!

Northeast

Mid-Atlantic

Southeast

Midwest

West

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