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Brad Bredehoft <[log in to unmask]>
Fri, 7 Sep 2012 12:42:48 -0500
text/plain (93 lines)
MS013: Paranormal Investigations in Museums and Historic Sites
Instructor: David Harvey
Price: $99
Dates: Sep 17 to Sep 21, 2012

Description:
Many museums and historic sites are being contacted by paranormal groups 
for permission to conduct investigations on their sites. There has been 
an explosion of interest in the paranormal in the past ten years with 
over a thousand teams and groups in the USA. There are also millions who 
follow this on television and other media. When a museum or historic 
site manager is approached by these groups there are many concerns, but 
there is also the potential for it to become a new marketing and income 
generating activity for the organization. This course is designed to 
give you the tools to have a constructive dialogue with these groups and 
to be able to develop a policy / program that best benefits your 
institution.

This short course will introduce you to Paranormal Groups. You will 
learn how these groups investigate and explore, the pros and cons of 
developing a policy and how to include them in your programs. The 
Paranormal Groups also need to be educated about the perspectives and 
mission of Museums and Historic Sites to appreciate how we operate. 
There can be benefits in understanding and working with each other. We 
will take you through the research, methods and equipment and approaches 
to public outreach by the paranormal teams.

We will address their perspectives and concerns. We will also go through 
the perspectives, equipment and policies of museums and our concerns. 
Then we will go through the potential benefits for both sides and how 
you can best take advantage of the public interest in this to develop 
policies and programs that enhance your marketing and program efforts in 
a way that protects your integrity and collections, yet brings more 
people in your doors.

Logistics:
Participants in Paranormal Investigations in Museums and Historic Sites 
will read literature and participate in two one-hour chats to discuss 
Paranormal Investigations in Museums and Historic Sites. Each student 
should read course materials and prepare questions or comments to share 
with the other students in the chat. This is a mini-course and takes no 
more than 10 hours of a student's time. This is an opportunity to 
brain-storm with colleagues about what works and what doesn't work.

To reserve a spot in the course, pay at 
http://www.collectioncare.org/tas/tas.html If you have trouble please 
contact Helen Alten at [log in to unmask]

The Instructor:
Dave Harvey is currently a consultant to the producers of a new National 
Geographic Television Series, America's Lost Treasures, set in museums 
across the USA. David is also a senior conservator with Rosa Lowinger 
and Associates - specializing in Objects, Architecture, and Sculpture.

He has thirty years of diverse experience in conservation, 
archaeological fieldwork, and American living history museum craftwork 
and interpretation. David was the archaeological conservator for the 
James River Institute for Archaeology, The Yorktown Archaeological 
trust, and the Virginia Company Foundation doing fieldwork, artifact 
cataloguing, scientific analysis, and the conservation and stabilization 
of diverse historical and prehistoric archaeological artifacts. He was 
the lab manager for the Metals & Arms conservation lab at Colonial 
Williamsburg. He was also responsible for the design and equipment 
specifications for the new Metals &Arms laboratory, X-radiography 
facility, and Analytical Laboratory in the DeWitt Wallace Collections & 
Conservation Building on the Bruton Heights School Education Center 
Campus. David was appointed Head of the Objects Conservation Department 
at The Rocky Mountain Conservation Center at the University of Denver, 
was the proprietor of his own professional conservation and consulting 
company Artifacts, and was the Senior Associate Conservator for Griswold 
Conservation Associates. David is a Professional Associate of The 
American Institute for Conservation (AIC) and has served as the local 
arrangements chair for the annual AIC meeting, program chair, chair, and 
emeritus chair of the Objects specialty group and editor of the New 
Materials and Research Column for the AIC News. David has pursued 
educational outreach during his career in diverse media such as 
scientific/technical journals, popular magazines and journals, 
television, and audio-visual lectures & workshops.

-- 
Brad Bredehoft
Sales and Technology Manager
Northern States Conservation Center
www.collectioncare.org
www.museumclasses.org

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