Departments
Programs
Museum Studies
- Director Associate Professor Elizabeth Kryder-Reid, Museum Studies, Anthropology
- Professors Debra Mesch, SPEA; Philip Scarpino, History; Susan Sutton, Anthropology; Larry Zimmerman (Public Scholar of Native American Representation) Museum Studies, Anthropology
- Associate Professors Jeanette Dickerson-Putman, Anthropology; Owen Dwyer, Geography; Elizabeth Brand Monroe, History; Paul Mullins, Anthropology; Kevin Robbins, History; Jean Robertson, Art History; Robert Sutton, Classical Studies
- Assistant Professors Matt Groshek (Public Scholar of Exhibit Planning and Design), Museum Studies, Visual Communication; Youngbok Hong, Visual Communication; Modupe Labode (Public Scholar of African American History and Museums), Museum Studies, History; Jennifer Lee, Fine Arts; Jennifer Mikulay (Public Scholar of Visual Culture), Museum Studies, Fine Arts; Elizabeth Wood (Public Scholar of Museums, Families, and Learning), Museum Studies, Education
- Academic Advising Cavanaugh Hall 419, (317) 274-1406
- Department E-mail museum@iupui.edu
- Department Web site http://liberalarts.iupui.edu/mstd/
As an urban university, IUPUI is part of a community with a rich heritage of museums and cultural arts. Faculty appointed as Public Scholars of Civic Engagement craft relationships and sustainable partnerships with area museums and cultural institutions and involve undergraduate and graduate students in meaningful ways in those collaborations. The program also offers extensive opportunities for student learning through the resources of the museum community, with experiences such as internships, collaboration on exhibit development and design, exhibition, and collections focused courses, access to collections, collaboration with faculty on museum research projects, and participation in museum-sponsored seminars, lectures, and professional meetings. The integral role of Indianapolis museums in the museum studies curriculum fosters a critical, reflective, and scholarly discourse on museums that is applied to current practices and issues in the field.
The program offers a master’s degree and both an undergraduate and a graduate certificate. Students considering application to the certificate or degree program are welcome in the classes. Up to nine credits earned as a graduate nondegree student may be applied toward the graduate certificate or degree upon admission to the program. Please see the Web site for admissions deadlines and current course offerings.