Margaret Koch, Samantha Garza, and Minsu Kwon – American Alliance of Museums https://www.aam-us.org American Alliance of Museums Tue, 06 Aug 2024 13:39:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://www.aam-us.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/android-icon-192x192-1.png?w=32&crop=0%2C0px%2C100%2C32px Margaret Koch, Samantha Garza, and Minsu Kwon – American Alliance of Museums https://www.aam-us.org 32 32 145183139 Museum Apprenticeships as Entry Points for Future Leaders https://www.aam-us.org/2024/08/06/museum-apprenticeships-as-entry-points-for-future-leaders/ https://www.aam-us.org/2024/08/06/museum-apprenticeships-as-entry-points-for-future-leaders/#comments Tue, 06 Aug 2024 13:39:07 +0000 https://www.aam-us.org/?p=145231 Earlier this year, the National Council of Nonprofits released a report documenting that workforce shortages continue to be a major problem for US nonprofits. The report also identified strategies being successfully deployed to recruit and retain scarce staff, among them identifying career advancement opportunities. In this guest post, director Margaret Koch and museum apprentices Samantha Garza and Minsu Kwon share how the Bullock Texas State History Museum is already deploying that tactic to provide pathways for advancement within the organization.

–Elizabeth Merritt, VP Strategic Foresight and Founding Director, Center for the Future of Museums


In January of 2024, the Bullock Texas State History Museum launched two new apprentice positions in an effort to provide starting points for future museum careers. These positions are full-time, entry-level jobs with benefits starting at a minimum wage of sixteen dollars an hour. The positions split duties, with twenty hours spent in Visitor Services and twenty hours spent assigned to a specific department matching a successful candidate’s interests. Intentionally, the positions remain open-termed without an end date. The Bullock’s goal in offering these positions is to serve as a steppingstone for museum professionals to rise in their skills and leadership potential.

The concept developed in response to what Bullock department heads were seeing in the hiring process—an increase in applicants with relevant academic degrees, but little to no proven museum skills or experience that met the position requirements. This correlated with what many colleagues have been hearing from museum program graduates, who report that their prior short-term internships (or lack thereof) do not provide enough experience to get to the interview stage in a competitive job market.

It took several years of internal discussions and researching state classifications (the Bullock is a state-governed museum) to develop a unique hybrid job description we thought would best entice a substantial, diverse, and multifaceted pool of applicants. We posted the job in the fall of 2023 and the response was gratifying—twenty applicants with bachelor’s and master’s degrees who were currently working primarily in retail and restaurants, but eager to put the theoretical aspects of their education to work. We interviewed nine applicants, using a matrix approved by HR to score them on a points system, and offered positions to two, who both accepted.

Two people wearing gloves and working on an antique chair on a pedestal
Samantha learns from Exhibit Tech, Josie Mays, on how to handle artifact installations. Photo credit: Courtesy of Bullock Texas State History Museum
A person handling the sleeve of a coat in a storage space
After handling condition reporting, Minsu prepares a zoot suit scheduled for installation in Carros y Cultura. Photo credit: Courtesy of Bullock Texas State History Museum

After seven months, the apprentices’ progress and growth are measurable; they are attaining hands-on skills in interactions with the public and in our Exhibit Technicians and Registrarial teams, respectively. The supervisors are also growing in their management and teaching skills and have gained dedicated and eager team members who are actively moving department projects forward.

We anticipate that this model will continue to be mutually beneficial overall. Among the advantages:

  • On paper and in practice, the value of what an institution does to serve its mission becomes clear, since the positions are full-time and fully integrated into the departments, rather than a few hours a week for a semester.
  • Apprentices practice skills needed in the field daily, and while they may work on various projects, they see them develop from start to finish.
  • These positions entail deep conversations between different departments, which encourages sharing from colleagues about other museum roles. The participation of apprentices in regular intra- and interdepartmental meetings further enhances their understanding of museum operations and proves effective in tracking the progress of upcoming exhibits and projects. Such updates also fill potential information gaps resulting from a schedule that is divided between two departments.
  • The title “apprentice” sets expectations to learn from practice and conveys permission to pose questions, carrying more influence than a title of “intern.”
  • Being entrusted with problem-solving on tangible projects encourages initiative and critical thinking as apprentices weigh the options; fallback support from supervisors is available when needed.
  • Learning the jargon and vocabulary that is used, whether specific to the institution or industry-wide, goes beyond the theoretical. This instrumental knowledge aids apprentices in discussing their ideas and projects with precision in an environment that positions them as colleagues.
  • Through front-line customer service work, they see and hear how behind-the-scenes roles impact visitors’ experiences each day.
  • Apprentices now see themselves in the field, are learning their strengths and passions, and can imagine a career path ahead. This opportunity allows them to evaluate how their skills align with their professional interests and to re-prioritize their focus according to what they see is needed to be successful.
A group of people inspecting the leg of a pair of pants on a dressed mannequin
Minsu, Tony Beldock, Head of Exhibit Production, and Mike Juen, Senior Registrar and Project Manager, work together on preparing a zoot suit for Carros y Cultura. Photo credit: Courtesy of Bullock Texas State History Museum
A person standing on a ladder to reach the top of a large shark model
One of the first major exhibition installations Samantha worked on at the Bullock was Sharks, organized by the American Museum of Natural History. Photo credit: Courtesy of Bullock Texas State History Museum

For future apprentice positions, the museum plans to prep supervisors more thoroughly on the administration expectations for their roles and the goals of their apprentices. We’ve realized that it would have been beneficial to have more immediate supervisor involvement and support earlier in the position creation process to collectively set defined measures of success and levels of acquiring skills. Administration meeting regularly with supervisors has alleviated some of those concerns.

Apprenticeships in the trades are certainly not new. In a multitude of museum environments, they offer advantages above the internship level, especially as so many internships remain unpaid or are unavailable after graduation. Providing entry points for future leaders to gain quality experiences while earning a salary with benefits is worth the planning and long-term investment.

]]>
https://www.aam-us.org/2024/08/06/museum-apprenticeships-as-entry-points-for-future-leaders/feed/ 2 145231