This book shows the importance of the Maker Movement for museums and historic sites, and presents a roadmap to building, planning, researching, and using a makerspace alongside more traditional museum programming. It calls for a revitalization of living history, which can be done through makerspaces and the maker movement.
This book shows the importance of the Maker Movement for museums and historic sites, and presents a roadmap to building, planning, researching, and using a makerspace alongside more traditional museum programming. It calls for a revitalization of living history, which can be done through makerspaces and the maker movement.
Tim Betz is a museum professional, historian, and artist. He is executive director of the Morgan Log House, a historical society in Lansdale, PA. He is an instructor of art history at Kutztown University of Pennsylvania and is completing his PhD in history at Lehigh University, in Bethlehem PA. He is particularly interested in historic processes and historic craft, which he uses as a tool for understanding the past.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1: Makerspaces and the Maker Movement The Maker MovementA Genealogy of the Maker MovementA Place for Making: Makerspaces and HackerspacesCritiques of the Maker MovementThe Maker Movement and History MuseumsChapter 2: History and the Maker Movement The Maker Movement at Historic SitesHistoric Making ManifestoThe Maker Movement and Living HistoryIf You Love It, Let it Go: Museums, Power, and MakingChapter 3: A Pedagogy of Museum Making Just what is Pedagogy Anyway?Museum Education and Constructivist ThinkingMaking to Learn: the Makerspace and Museum EducationMeasuring Success in the Historic MakerspaceChapter 4: Making a Makerspace in Four (Somewhat Easy) Steps AskingFundingLocatingMaintainingChapter 5: Putting the Makerspace to Work: Programming Programming Your Historic MakerspaceProgramming Curiosity at Your MakerspaceThe Historical Makerspace and Regular ProgrammingWorkshopsMaker Programming Out of the MakerspaceThe Virtual Makerspace and Make From HomeChapter 6: Recreating the Past Recreating the Past: a MethodologyA Hairy ExampleFriends in Historic PlacesChapter 7: Making as History Experimental Archaeology and the Museum MakerspaceWhat Making Can Show UsProcess as Artifact: Interrogating Intangible Cultural HeritageWhere else but the Museum? Who else but Museum Professionals?Do!Appendices Appendix A: Making and Your Site: Assessment WorksheetAppendix B: Your Mission and Your MakerspaceAppendix C: Historic Makerspace Sample BudgetAppendix D: Makerspace User AgreementAppendix E: InventoryAppendix F: Recipes and ProjectsWalnut InkVictorian Mourning JewelryEgg Tempera PaintOil Paint Appendix G: ProgramsDrop In WorkshopHistory Happy Hour
Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter 1: Makerspaces and the Maker Movement The Maker MovementA Genealogy of the Maker MovementA Place for Making: Makerspaces and HackerspacesCritiques of the Maker MovementThe Maker Movement and History MuseumsChapter 2: History and the Maker Movement The Maker Movement at Historic SitesHistoric Making ManifestoThe Maker Movement and Living HistoryIf You Love It, Let it Go: Museums, Power, and MakingChapter 3: A Pedagogy of Museum Making Just what is Pedagogy Anyway?Museum Education and Constructivist ThinkingMaking to Learn: the Makerspace and Museum EducationMeasuring Success in the Historic MakerspaceChapter 4: Making a Makerspace in Four (Somewhat Easy) Steps AskingFundingLocatingMaintainingChapter 5: Putting the Makerspace to Work: Programming Programming Your Historic MakerspaceProgramming Curiosity at Your MakerspaceThe Historical Makerspace and Regular ProgrammingWorkshopsMaker Programming Out of the MakerspaceThe Virtual Makerspace and Make From HomeChapter 6: Recreating the Past Recreating the Past: a MethodologyA Hairy ExampleFriends in Historic PlacesChapter 7: Making as History Experimental Archaeology and the Museum MakerspaceWhat Making Can Show UsProcess as Artifact: Interrogating Intangible Cultural HeritageWhere else but the Museum? Who else but Museum Professionals?Do!Appendices Appendix A: Making and Your Site: Assessment WorksheetAppendix B: Your Mission and Your MakerspaceAppendix C: Historic Makerspace Sample BudgetAppendix D: Makerspace User AgreementAppendix E: InventoryAppendix F: Recipes and ProjectsWalnut InkVictorian Mourning JewelryEgg Tempera PaintOil Paint Appendix G: ProgramsDrop In WorkshopHistory Happy Hour
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