Sunday, May 29, 2016

Journal Submissions and Presentation Opportunities for Undergraduates

Have you written a kick-butt research paper for a class on a topic you're passionate about and want to get a little more mileage out of all your hard work before you file that stapled stack of former trees away for the next decade (and try to forget the sleepless nights it caused you)? Here are some resources on research journals and opportunities to present papers that you can use to track down some experiences. These are a great thing to put on your CV/resume, especially if you're planning on applying to grad school.

Undergraduate Journals:

Presentation Opportunities:

Saturday, May 28, 2016

Maryland Maritime Museum Internships

The Calvert Marine Museum in Solomons Maryland, a lovely little town on the Western shore of the Chesapeake Bay, focuses on the ecological and social history of the Chesapeake Bay region, including watermen, prehistoric life (dinosaur bones!), live aquatic animals (including manta rays and sea otters!), and military history. There are kid-friendly exhibits, a touch tank containing a variety of Bay organisms, and a furnished Chesapeake Bay lighthouse. There is also an outdoor stage that hosts major performing artists for concerts throughout the year.

Internship opportunities are posted here when available.

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The Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum is a unique waterfront museum encompassing a swath of land with multiple repurposed buildings featuring exhibits on Chesapeake Bay history, culture, and ecology. One of the most recognizable features of the museum is its 1870s lighthouse as well as its working boat docks, open to visitors arriving by sea, and historic boat collections and working boat shop. Internships are offered in the summer in the education, curatorial, and events fields. Housing may be available as well. The town and museum are beautiful and truly unique! The author served as an education internship and found it extremely rewarding. Seasonal and part-time work is often offered as well, as are boat crafting apprenticeships to qualified applicants.

Internship opportunities are posted here when available. (Most likely posted in January and February and due in late February for the summer.)

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North Carolina Museum of Art Internships

The North Carolina Museum of Art, located in Raleigh, NC, boasts both an extensive collection of fine art and a large outdoor park with walking trails. The building and landscape are designed to be ecologically-sensitive, using innovative designs to use less energy. The museum offers internships for undergrad and graduate students.

Internship Opportunities:

  • Undergrad juniors and seniors, recent grads, grad students (minimum 2.8 GPA)
  • Unpaid but credit can be arranged with college
  • 10 to 32 hours a week; flexible schedule
  • Possible opportunities/departments:
    • Communications: New Media
    • Communications
    • Curatorial Dept.:Classical Studies
    • Membership and Development
    • Education: Youth and Family Programs
    • Education
    • Education: Student Tour and Docent Liaison (fall, spring only)
    • Education: Teen Programs
    • Education: College Night (fall only)
    • Park and Landscape 
    • Performing Arts and Film (summer only)
    • Registration
    • Security
    • Technology
    • Visitor Services
  • Application materials:
    • Cover letter
    • Resume
    • 2 letters of recommendation
    • Transcript (unofficial accepted)
  • Due dates:
    • Summer: March 1
    • Fall: June 15
    • Spring: November 1
  • more information here
Information about volunteering can be found here. Docents are recruited to lead school groups when needed.

The museum also has a travel program that offers museum- and art-focused travel tours for members, in cooperation with the Museum Travel Alliance. Learn more here.

The museum offers events for college students, particularly those interested in museums and art, including free admission on Friday nights. Learn more here.

Friday, May 27, 2016

High Museum of Art Internships and Undergraduate Fellowship (Atlanta, GA)

The High Museum of Art is dedicated to the display of contemporary art and architecture and is a renowned museum in the southeast, located in Atlanta, Georgia. The museum offers summer internships for junior and senior undergrads and recent graduates. There is also an undergraduate curatorial fellowship and a weeklong curatorial summer academy offered each year.

Internship Opportunities:

  • Unpaid; no housing; discounted parking
  • Free admission to museum events
  • Discount at museum shop and cafe
  • Summer, 8 weeks (first week of June to end of July)
  • Departments/opportunities available
    • Education intern: Museum interpretation
    • Education intern: School and Teacher Services
    • Education intern: Public Youth and Community Services
    • Education intern: Family Programs
    • Marketing & Communications intern: Marketing and PR
    • Marketing & Communications intern: Membership and Guest Relations 
    • Registrar Intern: Rights and Reproduction
  • Due Date: early March
  • More information here
  • Mellow Undergraduate Curatorial Fellowship
    • 2-year full-time summer fellowship
    • Less intensive engagement during academic year
    • 2 students chosen each year
    • Program also available at Art Institute Chicago, LA County Museum of Art, Museum of Fine Arts Houston, and the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (Kansas)
    • Work with staff on exhibitions, travel to partner museums
    • Stipend
    • Mentoring
    • Open to freshman and sophomore students from diverse backgrounds
    • Application due late February
  • Weeklong Summer Curatorial Academy
    • Open to 15 students
    • Rising sophomores and juniors
    • Learn about the museum and curatorial work through presentations from curators, field trips, and projects
    • One week in mid-May
    • Per diem for daily expenses
    • Modest travel and housing stipend possible if live far away
  • Application:
    • Resume
    • Transcripts
    • Personal Statement
    • Letter of recommendation
    • Application
    • Submit via email
  • More information about both opportunities here
More information about being a volunteer is available here

National Constitution Museum Internships (Philadelphia)

The National Constitution Museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is dedicated to interpreting the history and significance of the U.S. Constitution as well as iterating its significance to the modern world. The museum offers part-time internships to college students.

Internship Opportunities:

  • College credit can be arranged with your university
  • Discounts at museum store and restaurant
  • Free parking
  • For enrolled college students
  • One to three days/week
  • Potential available Opportunities:
    • Legal studies
    • Town Hall Speaker Series
    • Museum Theater and Stage Management
    • Public Relations
    • Museum Programs 
    • Marketing
    • Human Resources
    • Finance
    • Exhibits
    • Education
    • Development
  • More information here along with open position listings
  • Application online; process varies by position 
There isn't a clear due date or specified semesters.

Information about volunteering can be found here. Volunteers must be 15 or older but can help with visitor services and exhibit education. 

Information about professional development opportunities, such as educator conferences, webinars, and free sneak peeks of exhibits, can be found here.

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Chicago Style Endnotes and Footnotes Help

This is another post from my other blog, The Benchwarmer's Almanac, that I thought would be relevant to this blog's audience. You can also read my advice on polishing your research papers.

Any history major gets to know their way around Chicago/Turabian style during their tenure in the undergrad world, but if you're just starting out or could use help getting your footnotes done faster and easier, this article is for you. The most notable feature of Chicago Style is not Marilyn Monroe in a breezy white dress over a subway grate, but it's endless parade of Footnotes or Endnotes. If you find yourself or a friend panicking over how to put these rambunctious little creatures into your latest paper, I would like to share with you my Patent Pending (I wish) Chicago Pro Citation a-GoGo citation method, carefully developed in a musty college library for optimal user-friendly handling!!

First, while you're writing your paper, follow your sentences with parenthetical citations with the author and page number where you found the information from, just like if you were doing MLA, APA, or another parenthetical citation. Example:
Even America’s famous patriot and silversmith Paul Revere is pictured in his portrait by John Copley holding a silver tea pot as an example of some of the finest of his handiwork. (Roth 17)
Beautiful! This way, if you decide to rearrange, rewrite, or add content in your paper during the editing process, you won't have to worry about changing all the little endnote numbers around.

Once you've completed your final draft and are sure you won't be making any more structural changes to the paper, go through your paper and at the end of each sentence where you have a citation, click on Microsoft Word's "Add footnote" or "Add endnote" button (found under the References tab on the top toolbar). This will place the exponential number by your punctuation mark (there shouldn't be any space between the two) and then take you to the end of the page or document where you can record the citation information in your parenthetical brackets.
 Even America’s famous patriot and silversmith Paul Revere is pictured in his portrait by John Copley holding a silver tea pot as an example of some of the finest of his handiwork.[1]



[1] Roth, 17.
This is an example of a footnote. The exponent didn't transfer to Blogger, but you get the idea.

Be sure to then delete your parentheses and their content and move on to the next citation, clicking the Add ___note button once again. Also, remember the Chicago style has a different citation format for endnotes/footnotes than in the bibliography! I guess that's part of what makes it a big pain. Any citation guide will show you how to format each one though.

Boom! You SLAY that paper! Or at least just have something to turn in tomorrow...

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More resources:

Purdue OWL Chicago Citation

Student's Guide to History

Research Paper Writing Tips

I wrote this for my other blog, The Benchwarmer's Almanac, but thought it would be relevant for this site, as writing a killer research paper is a must-have skill for all humanities majors!

I really enjoy writing but I know papers are a real pain in the butt, especially with the time crunch and the added stress of other class assignments so papers aren't always a great reflection of your writing skill since you may be half-crazy with stress while pulling it together, but I have seen some pretty common weaknesses and errors in the papers I've reviewed over the years. It doesn't help that oftentimes secondary schools don't give proper training in how to write papers (I had a friend who revealed to my junior year of college that no one had ever taught her to write a thesis) and college professors typically throw you in the deep end with term papers and give very little constructive criticism on your finished product.

Anyways, I wanted to put together a list of some tips I've gotten along the years and some advice based on difficulties I've seen other students have in writing papers in general, but specifically research-based for the humanities.
  • You don't have to keep using quotes in your papers. Many students were taught to write this way in high school, especially since most writing is taught in English class where the teacher trains you to write body paragraphs in this structure:

                                          Introductory sentence with main idea of the paragraph
                                          First supporting point
                                          Lead-in to quote and a quote from the text to support first point
                                          Explanation of how quote supports the point
                                          Second supporting point
                                          Lead-in to next quote and quote supporting second point
                                          Explanation of how second quote supports second point
                                          Conclusion sentence with lead-in to next paragraph

Sound familiar?? Well, I have some liberating news for you, friend: you can stop using quotes from the text. In fact, I recommend that you do. It is appropriate in some cases, like when you're writing a paper addressing the argument of one specific text, but not really in the research paper situation. The idea of a research paper is that YOU conducted this research on your own and have drawn your own conclusions based on your findings, which you are now sharing with the readers. This is your chance to act like an expert, because you have, in a sense, become somewhat of an expert on this subject. So speak authoritatively to your reader instead of relying on other people's writing (quotes) to do the speaking for you. Instead, summarize the argument or main point the author was making in the part of the piece you would have normally quoted. If you want, you can verbally cite the author, especially if he or she is a major source for your paper or major voice on the topic. If not, you should put a citation after the sentence with the page number of the source you are drawing that argument from. Which brings me to my next point.

  • When to cite a source: This is probably one of the hardest things for student writers to figure out, and it is a tricky thing to navigate. I recommend erring on the side of citing annoyingly often just to ensure that you don't pass someone's thoughts or data off as your own (aka plagiarize). Here are some guidelines for citing sources:
    • If you are mentioning data or numbers of any kind, cite where you got them from.
    • If you are stating a fact or research finding that you found out from something you read, cite that piece.
    • If you are summarizing the words of another author or a major argument of theirs (essentially if you would have quoted them in your old high school method of writing), then cite the page(s) from which you are pulling their argument.
If you are unsure about this, review your work with a professor, librarian, or school writing center. As a general rule, while you are researching, be sure to takes notes of the page numbers of important arguments and data you want to use and/or mark important pages. This will help you immensely with being able to go back and pinpoint where you got your information from.


12-pager = Ultra McWhopper
  • You can relax your use of the Hamburger Writing Model. I was taught to very strictly follow the writing style I laid out above while going through middle and high school. Naturally, when I entered college, I was still holding myself strictly to the "Intro sentence-First point-Support-Explanation-Second Point-Support-Explanation-Conclusion" body paragraph format. This is a great guideline for beginning writers to use and your writing should generally follow a flow of "Setting the stage with my main point - giving proof and further elaboration of the argument - connecting your point back to your main thesis" but it does not have to be a painful regimen. I got to the point where I was tearing my hair out writing papers because I was trying to connect every paragraph back to the thesis, which made it just sound like a bad children's program (So what does this teach us again? That we should be kind to our neighbors!) Finally, a professor told me that I could give myself permission to loosen up. You want to make sure you keep bringing your points back to your thesis, but you don't need to do so when it's unnatural. And you can let your supporting points decide for themselves how many sentences or paragraphs they need to be fully fleshed out, rather than putting things on a strict schedule. Let your writing flow but be mindful of how each idea you introduce relates back to your main purpose. 

These are probably the biggest over-arching issues I have seen. Beyond this, I would just remember to let someone else (writing center, family member, friend) look over your paper before turning it in (even if they just read half) and keep track of your citations while you're writing; don't try to go back and identify everything unless you're really stuck. In fact, it may be a good idea to write up your bibliography early on too so that the nitpicky work of getting all the details right isn't left until 2am the day the paper's due. This way, too, you can get started early on research with an more concrete, do-able task of screening resources and writing down initial findings on your topic.

Well, that's a very broad overview of a tricky process, and sorry if it's not too polished, but I have to get back to my own research paper...heh.

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Buffalo Bill Center of the West Internships and Fellowships (WY)

The Buffalo Bill Center of the West, located in Cody, Wyoming not far from Yellowstone National Park, is a much-praised museum dedicated to preserving various aspects of the history of the American West. It features several museums, dedicated to the history of the Plains Indians, firearms, natural history, Western art, and, of course, Buffalo Bill. The museum offers an extensive internship program in a variety of fields as well as conservation internships and a fellowship and research stipend program.

Internship Opportunity:

  • Summer
  • Upper level undergrads and grad students
  • 10 weeks, 40 hours/week
  • $10/hour for some internships
  • Housing not provided but suggestions can be given
  • Departments:
    • Archives/Collections
    • Firearms Museum intern
    • Collections Management
    • Conservation
    • Raptor Experience intern
    • East Yellowstone Raptor Initiative internship
    • Education Tour Guide and Programming
    • Firearms Records
    • Graphics 
    • Library Collection Management
    • Photographic Objects Archival internship
    • Plains Indian Museum intern
    • Public Relations/Digital Media
    • Records Management
    • Registration
    • Whitney Art Museum Curatorial
  • Cover letter, Resume, Transcripts, 3 letters of recommendations, application
  • More info here
  • Additional info about conservation internships available here
Information about fellowships and research stipends can be found here. Fellowships regarding western art, Plains Indians, Yellowstone ecology, conservation and wildlife management, William Cody, firearms, Western culture and history can be proposed to the museum. Fellows must stay at least two weeks, make a presentation to the pubic on their research, and write a summary of their research. Housing and food is not provided. Deadline for submission is in late April (applying for the next year which extends from one summer to the next). 

Information about volunteering can be found here.

The Whitney Art Museum Internships (NYC)

The Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City is a medium-sized organization with an array of contemporary and modern fine art. They offer internships for undergrads and grad students throughout the school year.

Internship Opportunities:

  • Open to junior, senior
  • Unpaid but provide Metro Cards, museum cafe discount, and free admission to other NYC museums
  • Spring, Fall, Summer
    • Academic year: 2-3 days per week
    • Summer: 9 weeks, full-time
  • Departments offering internships:
    • Administration
    • Communications
    • Curatorial
    • Development
    • Digital Media
    • Education
    • Graphic Design
    • Marketing
    • Publications
    • Registration
    • Research Resources
  • Resume, cover letter, statement of purpose, transcript, etc. submitted by email
  • Due dates:
    • No set deadlines for academic year
    • February 1 for summer

Old Sturbridge Village Living History Museum Internships (MA)

Old Sturbridge Village is a vibrant living history museum in Massachusetts, interpreting 1830's American history, with an emphasis on the Industrial Revolution and agricultural history. They have a collection of historic buildings, heritage livestock, and fantastic historic interpreters to bring this era to life for visitors. They also have an extensive internship program for those interested in museum work and offer stipends for many internships.

Internship Information:

  • Open to undergrads and grad students who have completed at least 1 year of college
  • Stipends of $1,500 are available for many internships
  • Housing available at a fee 
  • 3 scholarship opportunities are available
  • Spring, fall, and summer semester internships available
    • Summer internship is 12 weeks (start of June to third week of August)
  • Internships available:
    • Technology/Education
    • Garden
    • Curatorial
    • Interpretation
    • Museum Education
    • Sustainable Agriculture
    • Development (unpaid)
    • Graphic Design (unpaid)
    • Marketing (unpaid)
    • Special Events (unpaid)
  • To apply, fill out and submit an application form and materials
  • Application due dates:
    • Summer: early March
    • Fall: mid-July
    • Spring: mid-November
  • Read more info on the website
An interpretation internship program is available for 14 to 17 year-olds. Applications are due in December. Learn more here.

Volunteers are welcomed, if over 18, and work in gardens, visitor services, office work, etc. Learn more here.

Monday, May 23, 2016

New Jersey Small Museums Internships - Part II

The first set of New Jersey small museums internships can be found here.
  • The Howell Living History Farman 130-acre farm interpreted as a working farm in the early 1900s, offers an internship program in self-sufficient farming. Interns work for 12 weeks in the summer, spring, or fall and gain experience working with livestock, crop processing, gardening, and even wood and metalworking, as well as other tasks depending on the season. The opportunity is open to students and non-students. Sounds pretty cool! More info here(Lambertville, NJ)
  • The Museum of Early Trades and Crafts welcomes volunteer student interns. Those interested can send in a resume. Volunteers are welcome to work in programming, education, and visitor services. Sounds like a cool museum! More info here. (Madison, NJ)
  • The Passaic County Historical Society has a house museum (Lambert Castle), museum, and library. They welcome high school and college age volunteer interns to work in collections, visitor services, events, research, library work, archival work, etc. More info here. (Paterson, NJ) 
  • The Thomas Edison Museum at Menlo Park offers internship opportunities in Archives (college degree required) and Education (undergrad or grad), requesting two to three days work a week. More info here. (Edison, NJ)
  • The Metlar Bodine House is a house museum and the historical museum of the Piscataway, NJ township.They welcome volunteers to work in Education, Preservation, Collections, PR, Tourism/Programming, Finance and Development, and Planning. More info here.
  • The Yogi Berra Museum and Learning Center welcome volunteers, especially those interested in visitor services and leading tours. More info here. (Little Falls, NJ - Montclair State Univ. campus)
  • The Grounds for Sculpture sculpture garden welcomes volunteers, who can work as docents or help in the Education, Performing Arts, Guest Services,Gardens, etc., and college and grad student interns interested in museum work. Internship info here. Volunteer info here. (Hamilton, NJ)
  • The Hoboken Historical Museum offers volunteer work, in particular to help with their events and festivals. More info here. (Hoboken, NJ)
  • The Twin Lights Museum is housed in a former lighthouse and is dedicated to interpreting lighthouse history and has volunteer work available in programming, education, and visitor services, as well as children's programming. More info here. (Highlands, NJ)
  • The Whippany Railway Museum welcomes volunteers over 21 years old willing to do physical labor. More info here. (Whippany, NJ)

Other New Jersey Historic Sites:

Another list of New Jersey-area museum internships can be found here on the Seton Hall University's Museum Professions Internships page.

Browse other Northeastern, New York City, and Mid-Atlantic area museum internships.

Sunday, May 22, 2016

New Jersey Small Museum Internships and Volunteer Opportunities

The Newark Museum has an extensive internship program, with opportunities available for college students and recent graduates to work in the summer or during the academic semesters.

  • Departments available to work in: Curatorial, Registrar, Education, Science, Marketing/PR, Exhibit Design, Library, 
  • Summer program runs from late June to the second week of August with interns working 4 days per week
    • Due date for summer applications is generally April 1
    • Professional development field trips and seminars are offered
    • Open to students from a variety of backgrounds/majors
    • Must have completed at least one year of college
  • More information located on the website

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The Morris Museum features both art, artifacts, science-themed exhibits, and a theater. It also offers volunteer internship opportunities. (Morristown, NJ)

  • Departments: Administration, Theater, Education, Front Desk/Visitor Services, Gallery, Graphic Design, Membership & Events, Museum Loan, Shop
  • Summer internships are available
  • Summer Science Ambassador Internship is a part-time paid opportunity for high school students (and recent graduates) giving experience in education
  • More information located on the website

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The National Guard Militia Museum of New Jersey offers volunteer internships:

  • Unpaid; minimum of 112 hours (approx. 8 hours/week)
  • Open to undergrad and grad students
  • Collections Management and Oral History Internships
  • Internships also available in Special Events, PR, and Graphic Design depending on staff availability
  • More information on their website

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Historic Allaire is a living history village that offers unpaid internships to students. (Wall Township, NJ)


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The Old Barracks Museum interprets colonial American history and offers unpaid internships to students throughout the year. (Trenton, NJ)

  • Internships available: Interpretive, Curatorial (includes physical objects), Development & Marketing, Graphic Design (they have a special graphic design project they need help with)
  • undergraduate and grad students welcome
  • Opportunities available throughout the year
  • Volunteer work in a variety of areas is welcome, including giving tours
  • More information here

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The  New Jersey Historical Society offers internships year-round and includes both a museum and library. (Newark, NJ)

  • Open to high school, college, and grad students
  • Unpaid but credit can be arranged
  • Opportunities: Manuscripts Curatorship, New Jersey Historical Research, Communications, Development, Exhibitions and Research, Collections, Education 
  • Resume and cover letter
  • Handicapped accessible
  • More information here

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Montclair Art Museum offers volunteer internships and volunteer work for high schoolers, with an application and information here.

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Liberty Science Center offers volunteer internships for college students in a variety of majors (in Jersey City). More information here.

  • Exhibit Maintenance and Technician Intern
  • Aquarist Intern
  • Grants Intern
  • Sales and Community Outreach Intern
  • Special Events Intern
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The Alice Paul Institute offers two internships, the Alice Paul Leadership Program Support internship (education focused) and the API Heritage Programs Support internship (collections focused). Internships are offered year-round. More info here. (Mount Laurel, NJ)
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The American Labor Museum is open to unpaid high school and college student internships year-round. Interns will complete a project in Research, Events, Exhibits, Education, Public Programming, Collections, or Library work. Docent and volunteer opportunities are available as well. More information here. (Haledon, NJ)
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The Aviation Hall of Fame of New Jersey offers volunteer positions, listed here. (Teterboro, NJ)
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The Garden State Discovery Museum offers more informal volunteer internship opportunities in education, animal care, exhibits, and marketing. More information is located here. (Cherry Hill, NJ)
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The Montclair Historical Society offers a wide array of volunteer opportunities relating to Education, Events, Fundraising, Office work, Gardening, Archives, Collections, etc. They also maintain and interpret a historic home. More info here. (Essex County, NJ)
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The Sterling Hill Mining Museum offers opportunities to volunteer as a museum docent. More information on their website. (Ogdensburg, NJ)
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The New Jersey Naval Museum lists information about volunteer opportunities on their website. (Hackensack, NJ)
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The Naval Air Station Wildwood Aviation Museum is open to volunteers helping with tours, mechanics, office work, and events. More info here. (Cape May County, NJ)
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The William Trent House is a Georgian house museum and welcomes volunteers to help with tours, events, and gardening. More info here. (Trenton, NJ)

Saturday, May 21, 2016

Delaware Contemporary Art Museum Internships

The Delaware Contemporary is an innovative non-collecting art museum in Wilmington, DE with a focus on education, community engagement, and fostering relationships with local artists. The museum offers internships for older undergraduate and grad students with rolling admission.

Internship Opportunities:

  • Unpaid
  • 10-15 hour/week
  • 12 weeks
  • Junior/senior undergrad or graduate student
  • Departments/Areas of Focus:
    • Education
    • Curatorial
    • Marketing
    • Museum Store
    • Special Events
  • Rolling admission
  • Submit by email
  • Materials (varies by department):
    • Resume
    • Cover Letter
    • Unofficial Transcript
    • Writing Sample
Volunteer Opportunities can also be found on this page of the website, including docent positions.

Artist opportunities are posted on the website when available as well. 

Hagley Museum and Library Fellowships (DE)

Hagley Museum and Library is an educational institution and museum in Wilmington, DE consisting of the du Pont family's first home and gardens, gun powder yards, and a machine shop, a testament to nineteenth century industry. The du Ponts invented gun powder and owned and built a number of prominent properties in Delaware, now many of which are prominent museums. The museum, a Smithsonian affiliate, also contains a research library which offers fellowships and research grants to scholars conducting work that might benefit from the museum's resources.

Fellowship Information:

  • Exploratory Research Grants: for one-week scholarly research visits
    • Tri-annual consideration
    • Due dates: March 31, June 30, October 31
  • Henry Belin du Pont Research Grants: for up to eight weeks of research for more in-depth work
    • Tri-annual consideration
    • Due dates: March 31, June 30, October 31
  • Henry Belin du Pont Dissertation Fellowships: for grad students who have completed coursework for a doctoral degree - up to four months
    • Due date: November 15
  • Dissertation Fellowship in Business and Politics: for grad students who have completed coursework for a doctoral degree - up to one year
    • Due date: November 15
  • Opportunities to give informal talks, write on the museum's research and collections blog, and participate in its scholarly interview programs are available
  • Housing is available onsite for scholars
  • More information can be found on the website
Volunteer opportunities are listed on the website, including opportunities for youth and for groups.

The museum also has a Youth Leadership Program for teens, which helps participants build professional skills and learn in the process. Applications are typically due in Late March.

Delaware Museum of Natural History Internships

The Delaware Museum of Natural History, located in Wilmington, DE, is dedicated to the interpretation of science and ecology. They offer internships for high school and college students.

Internship Opportunities:

  • Unpaid
  • Summer
  • College and grad student internships offered:
    • Fundraising/Events (Development Dept.)
    • Collections and Research
    • Communications (marketing, PR, advertising, graphic design, web development are all possible focuses)
    • Public Programming (early childhood edu., animal care, summer camp, gallery interpretation, education collections, events, family programs, rentals)
  • High school internships offered:
    • Public Programming (see above)
  • Internships are posted early in the year on the organization's website
Volunteer opportunities are detailed on the museum website, located at this link.

Friday, May 20, 2016

Museum of the Moving Image Internships (NYC)

The Museum of the Moving Image is an intriguing museum dedicated to the history of film and media. They offer paid summer internships for senior students, graduates, and grad students.

Internship Opportunities:

  • Full-time
  • Paid
  • Summer
  • International students are welcome
  • Open to rising undergraduate seniors, graduates, and grad students
  • Possible positions:
    • Film and digital media
    • Institutional Archive
    • Membership/PR
  • Cover Letter
  • Resume
  • Letter of recommendation
  • Due in late March
Information about volunteer opportunities are also available here.

Tenement Museum Internships (NYC)

The Lower East Side Tenement Museum is dedicated to preserving and interpreting the lives of lower class citizens and immigrants who resided in New York City's infamous tenement buildings. It offers internship and volunteer opportunities.

Internship/Fellowship Opportunity:

  • Summer internship "Eloise Susanna Gale Fellows"
  • Mentorship-based program
  • Curatorial and education departments
  • College and grad students interested in working in small museums
  • Application information is posted here when position is open
Additionally, volunteer opportunities are available and there are currently part-time museum jobs open, information about which can be found here.

Frick Collection Fellowships (NYC)

The Frick Collection in New York City exhibits fine art of the Western world, specializing in classic pieces and the European masters. The collection is housed in the former residence of Henry Clay Frick and has a sister institution, the Frick Art Reference Library. They offer interpretive and curatorial fellowships for those beginning their museum work career as well as internships year-round for college students.

Internship Program Information:

  • Offered spring, summer, and fall
  • Open to undergrads and graduate students interested in art museum or library career
  • Most are unpaid
  • Interns work with a particular department
  • Strong background in art history, museum studies, museum education, or library work is looked for
  • Email application:
    • Resume
    • Cover Letter
    • Application
  • Internship positions are posted here when available


Fellowship Program Information:
  1. Curatorial Fellowship:
    1. For doctoral candidates within two years of completing dissertation
    2. Two year duration
    3. Deadline typically in late January
    4. Part-time
    5. Work with curatorial department on exhibits, symposia, projects
  2. Interpretation Fellowship:
    1. 12 months
    2. Learn about and practice museum education
    3. One-of-a-kind program
    4. Museum professionals or students with at least one year of grad school completed
    5. Stipend
Opportunities posted here as they arise along with more detailed application instructions

Additionally, volunteer positions are posted here when available.

American Museum of Natural History Internships (NYC)

The American Museum of Natural History is located in New York City and has a variety of exhibits featuring artifacts surrounding science-related subjects, including interactive and kid-friendly exhibits. The museum offers many interesting educational and professional opportunities, including an MA in Teaching and PhD program as well as internships for high school and college students.

Internship Opportunities:
  1. High School internship
    1. free transportation
    2. Stipend
    3. College and career prep
    4. Summer and school year weekends
    5. must attend high school in NYC and be 16-18 years old
    6. Focus is on helping visitors learn about science 
    7. Deadline: early April
    8. Online application, essay, recommendation letter
  2. Museum Education and Employment Program
    1. Summer
    2. Must be 18-21 years old and an NYC resident
    3. An interest in science and ability to work with public and children
    4. 4 weeks training, 6 weeks employment
    5. Create and lead tours; interact with visitors
    6. Application, personal statement, resume
    7. Mid-march due date
  3. Public Program / Margaret Mead Film Festival Program
    1. Current college and grad students
    2. Administrative, design, marketing, public programming, and education tasks
    3. 2 whole days per week and 4 weekend or evening programs per month
    4. Unpaid but can arrange credit
    5. Rolling admission
  4. Graduate student internships also available; info available upon request to the organization
More information on graduate and undergrad courses offered by the museum is available here: http://www.amnh.org/learn-teach/post-secondary/graduate-and-undergraduate-courses

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Museum of Modern Art Internships (NYC)

The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City is a world-famous contemporary art museum. The museum offers internships open to undergraduates and graduates with plenty of professional development opportunities. It also has many other exciting extended learning and professional development opportunities.

Internship Information: 
  • Seasonal or 12-month (year-long begins in September)
  • Must have at least two years of college completed
  • Open to graduates and professionals
  • Open to international students
  • Unpaid and no housing
  • Departments: (variety of areas of focus within each)
    • Curatorial Affairs 
    • Education and Research Support
    • Exhibitions and collections 
    • External affairs (programming, communications, marketing)
    • Administrative
    • Retail
Application Information:
  • Mail or online submission
  • Materials:
    • Application
    • Resume
    • Transcript (official or unofficial)
    • Letter of recommendation
    • Portfolio (for certain departments)
See the website for FAQ's and further details. 

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Solomon R. Guggenheim Art Museum Internships (NYC)

The Solomon R. Guggenheim Art Museum displays a variety of forms of contemporary art and is located in New York City (not far from the Smithsonian's Cooper-Hewitt Design Museum, in fact!) The building was designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and now houses an array of intriguing art installations and permanent pieces. Internships are offered for advanced undergrads and above, with plenty of professional development opportunities offered, including a field trip. An international fellowship and internship are also offered at the museum's international locations in Venice and Bilbao for candidates with language fluency in appropriate tongues.

Internship Information:

  • Open to junior level and above undergrads, recent graduates, grad students, postgraduates, and mature professionals
  • Spring, summer, fall internships available
    • Spring and fall: part-time, 2 days a week
    • Summer: full-time, 4-5 days/week
    • 3 month commitment
  • Museum culture seminar
  • Unpaid, no housing available (suggestions can  be made)
  • Summer graduate internship stipend program available (see site)
  • Field trip
  • Open to international students
  • Departments available for internship (basically anything you can think of:
    • Abu Dhabi Project (they are building a museum there but need help in NYC with planning)
    • Abu Dhabi Project: Architecture/Exhibition Design
    • Abu Dhabi Project: Curatorial
    • Art Services and Prep
    • Business Development
    • Conservation
    • Curatorial
    • Curatorial: Asian Art
    • Development (Individual, corporate, institutional, special events, operations)
    • Director's Office
    • Education
    • Education: Public Programs
    • Exhibition Design
    • Exhibition Management
    • Facilities and Office Services
    • Finance
    • Global Communications 
    • Graphic Design
    • HR
    • IT
    • Interactive
    • Library and Archives
    • Legal
    • Marketing
    • Media and PR
    • Photography
    • Publishing and Digital Media 
    • Registrar
    • Retail and E-commerce
    • Visitor Services
Application Information:
  • Application form
  • Cover Letter
  • Resume/CV
  • List of relevant coursework
  • 2 letters of recommendation
  • 3-5 page writing sample (portfolio for certain departments)
  • Postmarked before due dates:
    • Summer: January 30
    • Fall: June 1 
    • Spring: November 1
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There is also an International Fellowship offered, which is paid work at three different museum locations, NYC, Bilbao, and Venice interesting in curatorial work. It is open those with at least a graduate degree in art history and a fluency in English, Italian, and Spanish.
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There is an international internship offered at the Guggenheim's location in Venice as well, with more information here: http://www.guggenheim-venice.it/inglese/education/internship-program.html

Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio Internships (Chicago)

The Frank Lloyd Wright Trust runs a few properties in the Chicago area, their central offices being at The Rookery in downtown Chicago with the additional properties of Wright's Oak Park Home and Studio, the Robie House, and the ShopWright Merchandise Center. Interns can be placed at any of these locations. Internships are offered year-round and detailed postings are placed on the Trust's website when a position is open.

Internship Information: 

  • Students, graduates, and career-changers welcome
  • Open to arranging academic credit with student's home institution
  • Internships offered within certain departments
  • An effort is made to match intern's interest with assigned duties
  • For more information and current listings, check here: http://www.flwright.org/aboutus/employmentandinternships
Information about volunteering, including docent opportunities, can be found here.

Fallingwater Internships (PA)

Fallingwater, Frank Lloyd Wright's Western Pennsylvania home, offers paid summer internships with housing. Sounds like a sweet deal!

Internship information:

  • Open to undergraduates and graduate students (completed or close to completion)
  • 10 weeks, 40 hours/week
  • Paid
  • Housing on site
  • Summer
  • Possible majors of interest: Museum studies, Library/Information Science, Landscape architecture, horticulture, historic preservation, architecture, arts education, art history, etc
  • Offered through the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, who runs the home
  • Information and yearly listing located here: http://waterlandlife.org/412/internships
The Western PA Conservancy also offers a Watershed Conservation Intern as well as other short- and long-term hands-on internships and part-time unpaid fall and spring semester internships, I'm guessing in landscaping and nature conservancy-related fields. Learn more here.

Sunday, May 15, 2016

Small Baltimore, MD Museum Internships

The Baltimore Museum of Industry offers volunteer internships for students with at least one year of undergraduate experience. The museum is located in Baltimore, MD and features a variety of historic machines and exhibits on American industrialization, factories, and inventions throughout US history. Internships are flexible and deadlines appear to be rolling.

Internship Information:

  • Applicants must be 18 or older with at least a year of college 
  • A criminal background investigation may be done on prospective interns
  • Interviews and training will be conducted
  • Mon - Thurs 10am - 4pm hours available
  • Flexible hours/schedule
  • Credit can be arranged with home college
  • Possible departments to intern with:
    • Archives, Library, and Photography
    • Collections Storage and Inventory
Application Information:
  • Online PDF form
  • List of references
  • Email the institution to inquire about internship positions
  • No set deadlines
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Port Discovery on the downtown Baltimore harbor is an interactive museum for children. It doesn't have formal internship listings but can arrange internships with interested students from a variety of fields. Internships are on a volunteer basis and are limited.

  • Available to undergrad and grad students
  • unpaid
  • Departments to work with:
    • Education and programming
    • Development and Marketing
    • Exhibits
  • Mail a cover letter and resume 
  • Volunteer and internship details: http://www.portdiscovery.org/support/volunteer 
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The Mont Clare Museum House  is located in southwest Baltimore and offers academic internships in the summer or school year for undergrad and grad students.

  • Undergrad and grad students
  • Academic credit can be arranged
  • Unpaid
  • Possible Departments:
    • Collecions
    • Record Management
    • Museum interpretation
  • Summer or School year
  • Resume and application can be submitted via email
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The American Visionary Art Museum specializes in outsider, avant-garde, and pop art. It offers volunteer and docent opportunities, with more information here: http://www.avam.org/get-involved-now/volunteer.shtml

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The B&O Railroad Museum focuses on train and railroad history and paraphernalia. Volunteer opportunities are listed here: http://www.borail.org/BO-Volunteer.aspx
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The Reginald F. Lewis Museum of African American History and Culture lists internship opportunities here when available: http://www.lewismuseum.org/about/careers

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The Edgar Allen Poe House offers volunteer opportunities, including docent positions, listed here: http://www.poeinbaltimore.org/volunteer/

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Other Museums in Baltimore:

Baltimore Museum of Art, MD Internships

The Baltimore Museum of Art is located in downtown Baltimore and features works of art from a variety of times and global cultures. They offer internships in different areas of museum work. Employees are required to pass a security clearance and drug test.

Internship opportunities: 

  • Open to undergrads and grad students as well as recent graduates
  • Learn about museum work and be guided by a mentor
  • Department/Fields of Work:
    • Visitor Services
    • Graphic Design
    • Contemporary Curatorial
    • Archival and Special Projects Grants
    • Exhibition Graphics
    • Grant Statistics
    • Marketing and Communications
    • Textiles Curatorial
  • Internship listings are posted seasonally on website
  • Can apply for up to two positions
  • Typically unpaid
Application information:
  • Summer due date: Late April
  • Cover letter
  • Resume
  • Unofficial transcript
  • Reference Letter
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Volunteer opportunities in a variety of departments, including education, textiles, and visitor services, (all very involved and hands-on) are listed here: https://artbma.org/about/volunteer.html 

Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore Internships and Fellowship

The Walters Art Museum in downtown Baltimore, Maryland holds a variety of mediums of art and historic artifacts, dating back to Ancient Egypt and Rome, encompassing an intriguing collection representing a menagerie of cultures around the globe. They offer opportunities for students and scholars interested in the arts, including revolving fellowships and internships.

Internship information:
  • Open to undergrad and grad students
  • Credit can be arranged with your college
  • Background check will be performed before employment
  • Equal opportunity employer
  • Gain knowledge of museum work
  • Departments/Fields of Work: varies from season to season, but some past ones that have been offered include:
    • Rare Books and Manuscripts
    • Education & Art Education
    • Studio Art
    • Public Relations
    • Copyright
    • Asian and Islamic Art
  • More information on the latest opportunities here
  • Resume
  • Cover Letter
  • 2 Letters of Reference (for certain internships)
  • Online/email submission
Check here for updated internship listings from season to season.
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  • Robert and Nancy Hall Fellowship: undergrad and grad students at Johns Hopkins
  • Curatorial Fellowship for advanced Johns Hopkins University grad students
  • Two postdoctoral curatorial fellowships (2-3 years; completed Ph.D.)
  • Conservation fellowship for recent conservation master's graduate

Information taken from the Walters Gallery website and up-to-date as of 5/5/2017. Always check the institution's website for current information.

Saturday, May 14, 2016

Smithsonian Associates Internships

The Smithsonian Associates run educational programs and disseminate information about Smithsonian projects and exhibits in Washington, DC. They offer internships open to undergraduate and graduate students in a variety of areas, mostly relating to different aspects of museum programming, education, and outreach. If you enjoy education and arts within the museum setting, these sound like a lot of fun! Internships are unpaid and stipends are not offered. International students are welcomed but must obtain a work visa.

Internship Information:

  • Undergrad and grad students
  • No particular background of study required
  • unpaid 
  • Selected interns must undergo a background check
  • Academic credit can be arranged with student's institution
  • Following departments are available to work in:
    • Smithsonian Sleepovers (coordinate, plan, and work at...have to sleep over with the kids in the museum)
    • Development
    • Discovery Theater:
      • DT Admin/House Management
      • DT Technical Intern
      • DT Museum Theater and Education Intern
    • Adult Education Programming
    • Digital Marketing
    • Film Production
    • Performing Arts
    • Specials Events
    • Social Media
    • Studio Arts
    • Summer Camp
Application Information:
  • Must submit:
    • Current Resume
    • Recent Writing Sample
    • Academic transcript (unofficial or official)
    • Two letters of recommendation
    • Online application
  • Due dates:
    • Summer: February 1
    • Fall: July 1
    • Winter/Spring: October 1
  • Applications may still be considered after due dates

Volunteer opportunities can also be found here: http://smithsonianassociates.org/ticketing/volunteer/

Sound like some fun internships! 

Friday, May 13, 2016

Smithsonian Freer and Sackler Galleries Internships (DC)

The Smithsonian's Freer and Sackler Galleries in downtown DC on the Washington Mall are home to Asian art and artifacts, many dating back to ancient times. Most internships are unpaid and do not offer housing but are easily accessible by metro. Internships are available in a variety of fields of museum work. The two galleries are connected, although the Freer is closed for renovation until 2017 (and thus may not be offering internships in certain areas) while the Sackler will remain open and operational. Fellowships as well as a paid internship for high schoolers are also offered.

Internship Information:
  • Individual departments have different requirements and applicants can choose three departments to apply to
  • An interest in Asian history is encouraged
  • Departments:
    • HR/Finances/Administration
    • Archives
    • Collections Management
    • Conservation and Scientific Research
    • Curatorial
    • Design and Production
    • Education and Public Programs
    • Exhibition Management
    • Info Technology
    • Library
    • Membership and Development
    • Photography
    • PR and Marketing
    • Rights and Reproduction
    • Publications
    • Scholarly Programs and Publications
    • Shop
  • A paid internship is offered for high school students: read more here

Application Requirements:

  • Online application
  • Statement of interest
  • Resume or transcript
  • 2 letters of recommendation 
  • Applicants will be notified within 2 months
  • Spring: October 15
  • Summer: March 15
  • Fall: July 15
Fellowships are also offered. Learn more here.

Smithsonian "Behind-the-Scenes" Internships

The Smithsonian's Office of the Deputy Undersecretary for Collections and Interdisciplinary Support manages the Smithsonian's vast collections. The internship program is for undergraduates interested in collections management.

Those interested can fill out an online application and submit a resume, unofficial transcript, and essay.

Fall due date: August 1
Spring due date: November 15
Summer due date: March 15

You can find more information here: http://www.smithsonianofi.com/the-smithsonian-duscis-special-projects-internship/

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MCI (Museum Conservation Institute) Graduate Student Internship 

Offered through the Smithsonian to advanced graduate students with at least a year of conservation experience.

  • Advanced grad students enrolled in a conservation training program
  • one academic year in length 
  • Deadline: Mid-February
  • Apply online 
Other internship and fellowship listings with the Museum Conservation Institute are listed on this page: http://www.si.edu/mci/english/professional_development/fellowships_internships_opportunities.html

Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage Internships and Fellowships

The Smithsonian's Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage archives and records folk music and puts on an annual folk festival on the Washington, DC Mall, showcasing foreign and US cultural heritages. Internships are available year-round for students and non-students. Most are non-paying and length and hours are flexible, ranging from six weeks to a year. Fellowships are also offered through the Smithsonian.

Internship Opportunities:

  • Preferred 15-20 hours/week but hours are flexible
  • Mentorship Program for a More Diverse Workplace: for women of color (small stipend for 100 hours of work in fall semester)
    • Fall 2016 deadline is September 1, 2016 
  • Flexible year-round opportunities
  • Fields of work:
    • Folklife Festival:
      • Anthropology, ethnomusicology, language studies focus
      • Year-round but particularly in the summer
      • Summer: need interns to work on event production, technical crew, Festival marketplace, social media, web production, Festival blog, graphic design, curatorial team, PR, volunteer coordination, video production, administration
      • Summer interns must work every day of festival: last week of June and first of July
    • Smithsonian Folkways Recording:
      • Cross between record label and museum
      • Intern projects in marketing, social media, mail order, royalties and copyright, recording production, web production, 
      • graphic design, typography internships for students proficient in Adobe Creative Suite with a portfolio to submit
    • Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives:
      • Work in archives and collections cataloging, preservation, digitization
      • Summer interns process audio and video from Folklife Festival
      • Welcome Library and Info Studies students 
      • Should have interest in world folk traditions, audio engineering, photography, photoshop, web design, or library and archival work 
Application Requirements:
  • Online application 
  • Essay
  • Resume
  • Transcript
  • Letters of recommendation
  • Summer deadline: March 15
  • Rest of the year: six weeks before desired start date 
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  • Predoctoral, postdoctoral, senior postdoctoral scholars
  • Very competitive (according to website)
  • Awarded annually
  • Arranged through Smithsonian's Office of Fellowships and Grants
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Information about volunteering can be found here.

Longwood Gardens, PA Internships

Longwood Gardens, a large garden and nature center in eastern Pennsylvania (near DE), has a large variety of student internships in garden and landscape fields as well as management, education, visitor services, and library work. These seem like incredible programs, featuring stipends and housing. There is also an international student intern program and a UK student program. Due dates are in February for the summer and May for the fall.

Internship Information:

  • 3-12 months (some specific opportunities are mandatory 12 months)
  • All current college students or graduated within a year
  • Must be legally able to work in America
  • Must hold valid US driver's license
  • Internship departments:
    • Arboriculture
    • Conservatory Management
    • Display Design (12 month)
    • Education
    • Greenhouse Production
    • Guest Engagement & Visitor Programs
    • Horticulture Research
    • Integrated Pest Management (12 month)
    • Library (12 month, grad student or recent graduate of MLS program)
    • Marketing & PR (12 months)
    • Natural Lands Management (6 to 12 month)
    • Nursery Management
    • Outdoor Display
    • Performing Arts (12 month)
    • Plants Record Management (12 month)
    • Turf Management 
    • Rotational Summer Public Horticulture
  • Housing provided (in historic houses!)
  • $9.50/hour stipend (40 hour/week requirement)
  • Student gardens, furnishings and utilities in houses, and other benefits
  • Medical insurance available

Application Information:

  • Summer due date: February 1
  • Fall due date: May 1
  • Application, resume, official transcripts, statement of intents, reference letter
  • 2.5 GPA minimum
  • Open to students enrolled in a college outside the US or recently gradauted
  • One year of work in related field
  • Areas of work:
    • Ornamental Horticulture
    • Education
    • Library Science
    • Marketing & PR
  • Program for UK horticulture students and graduates with a possible scholarship (due date June 15)
  • Housing available
Online Learning Opportunities in gardening, landscapes, horticulture.

Thursday, May 12, 2016

The Society of the Cincinnati, DC Anderson House Museum Grad Internships and Fellowships

The Society of the Cincinnati's Anderson House Museum and society headquarters, located in northwest DC on embassy row in Dupont Circle, offers two internships in museum work for graduate students featuring stipends as well as library research fellowships. The Society is a hereditary group comprised of male descendants of Revolutionary War officers. The Anderson House is an early twentieth century mansion filled with intriguing decorative arts amassed by Society member and American ambassador Larz Anderson in his travels through the world, including choir stalls from a European church and other large, incredible stuff that rich, well-traveled people are able to obtain. It's a breath-taking place and also home to the Society's Revolutionary War and George Washington-related memorabilia, maps, documents, books, and objects.

Note: There is a special 2017 library fellowship relating to colonial American history open for application until November 11, 2016. Read more here.

Housing is not offered but the house is a short walk from the Dupont Circle metro station (and close to a multitude of Starbuckses).

Internship Opportunities:

  • Collections Management:
    • American Revolution and/or Gilded Age emphasis
    • $1,500 stipend
    • Grad student studying art history, material culture, museums, etc. interested in a museum career
    • Care, preservation, and documentation of museum collections
    • Daily work of the museum and/or independent project
  • Curatorial Work and Interpretation:
    • Exhibitions, curatorial research, and education emphasis
    • $2,000 stipend
    • Strong research and writing skills
    • History and material culture of early 19th century America and/or Gilded Age DC interest 
Detailed listings posted on the website when available. Find out more here: http://www.societyofthecincinnati.org/scholarship/fellow_intern/museum_internships

Volunteer opportunities are also available for interested parties over age eighteen, including public programming and docent work. Learn more here.

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Library fellowships are also offered - three per year:
  • $1,500 stipend for travel, housing, expenses
  • Graduate students and other scholars wishing to use library resources 
  • 2017 Fellowship: The Society of Colonial Wars in the State of Maryland Fellowship for any scholar interested in an American colonial period subject (November 11, 2016 due date)
  • One year from date of the award given to complete research using library
  • Library requests a copy of publication resulting from research
  • A 3 to 5 page report on findings must also be written
  • CV
  • 2 page or less research proposal
  • (If grad student) 2 sealed letters of professorial recommendation
  • Cite specific library holdings that will aid research

Additionally, an annual lecture is given on a subject related to the Revolutionary War. Read more here. 

Smithsonian Cooper Hewitt Design Museum, NYC Summer Internships

The Smithsonian's Cooper Hewitt Design Museum in New York City offers a summer internship program for college students interested in learning about museum practice.

Internship details:

  • 10 weeks/ 40 hours per week
  • Summer (second week of June to mid-August)
  • field trips, lectures, and public programs
  • Cross-disciplinary (open to a variety of majors)
  • $2,500 stipend
  • Undergrads and those who will graduate right before that summer
  • Departments:
    • Communications and Marketing
    • Cross-Platform Publications
    • Development and membership
    • Curatorial: Drawing, Prints, and Graphic Design
    • Digital and Emerging Media
    • Curatorial: Product Design
    • Education
    • Library
    • Curatorial: Textiles
    • Curatorial: Socially Responsible Design
Application details:
  • Late February due date
  • Resume, cover letter, short essay, two references, transcript
  • Apply online
View more details here: http://www.cooperhewitt.org/careers/

The building looks incredible! Sounds like a hip and intriguing set of opportunities for more progressive and artistic students interested in museums.

Smithsonian Internships

The Smithsonian, America's national museum institution, offers a dizzying array of internship opportunities, most centered in Washington, DC. You can apply to individual museums as well as to the general Smithsonian applicant pool (it's probably wisest to apply to both!) Most opportunities are unpaid but there are a few ones featuring stipends as well as some scholarships that can be applied to internships (select the stipend program tag to see these scholarships). This post details the various institution-wide programs there are; click the Smithsonian tag to see posts on internships and fellowships at specific Smithsonian museums and affiliates.

Smithsonian positions are prestigious but extremely competitive because the institution is so well known, so be sure to apply to other places as well. Also, you may be more likely to get busywork or be confined to work in one small area of the overall work of a museum just because of the nature of how large the museums are. The other downside is that they don't offer housing or stipends, which can make it difficult for out-of-the-area students to work because DC housing is extremely expensive, even in the suburbs. However, if it's your passion, go for it! Your school or outside organizations might have scholarship programs for interns you can apply to. Summer is an especially competitive time, so another tip is to apply to fall or spring internships if you can.

Internship opportunities:

  • General Smithsonian Intern Pool: Smithsonian staff who need an intern can pull from this pool (pun intended)
    • Fall Semester due date: August 1 
    • Spring Semester due date: November 1
    • Summer Semester due date: March 15
    • Online application 
    • You can also apply to specific museums' programs
  • James E Webb Internship: for minorities interested in business and administration
    • Must be a minority (and US citizen or resident) and enrolled in undergrad or grad program in business or public administration
    • 10 weeks, full time
    • $600/week stipend 
    • Summer and Fall Deadline: February 1
    • Spring Deadline: October 1 
    • Online application
    • Essay of interest, resume, unofficial transcripts, references
    • Placed in an administration office in one of the museums or affiliates
  • Katzenberger Foundation Art History Scholarship
    • 6 offered each summer 
    • need-based
    • college junior or senior
    • Art history major or related focus
    • 3.0 GPA
    • US Citizen or permanent resident
    • Need-based
    • February 1 due date
    • $6,000 stipend
    • Essay of interest, transcripts, resume, references
  • Minority Awards Program
    • Minority and a US citizen or permanent resident 
    • Enrolled in undergrad or grad program with 3.0
    • Summer and Fall Deadline: February 1
    • Spring Deadline: October 1
    • $600/week stipend
    • 40 hours/week for 10 weeks
  • Native American Awards
    • Informally or formally relate to a Native American community
    • Enrolled in undergrad or grad program
    • Summer and Fall Deadline: February 1
    • Spring Deadline: October 1
    • $600/week stipend
    • 40 hours/week for 10 weeks