
Making History
Description
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Highlights include:
Why museums and makerspaces are a natural fit togetherWays to organize and create a makerspace in a museum of any budgetCreating a makerspace and culture of making that is inclusive and for the entirety of the communityStrategies for researching historic making techniques and adapting them to the modern worldCreating meaningful makerspace-centered programming The processes and methods explored in this book will help produce a sustainable makerspace that will help the museum or historic site that adopts it reach new audiences, creating growth and new museums stakeholders. Likewise, through calling for a recalibration of living history through the language of the makerspace, this project calls for new approaches to living history. Thus, it is a call for a disruption to the status quo and a push towards sustainable and meaningful living history.
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Person
He is particularly interested in historic processes and historic craft, which he uses as a tool for understanding the past.
Content
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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