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Date: | Thu, 7 Jan 1999 09:10:21 -0500 |
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For the last year, I have been involved in a distance-teaching program at the local
university. Through a Web site, we run graduate seminars complete with
student-teacher dialogue, mandatory and optional reading, submitting and grading
papers, comments on the course and all kind of topic-related discussions. Museology
courses would be easy to organize around the same model and some probably are.
Hervé Gagnon
JERRIE CLARKE a écrit:
> I support the idea of distance learning offered for a graduate program
> in Museum Studies. The thought of quitting a good job and becoming a
> starving graduate student again is not an attractive idea. A leave of
> absence for only a couple of months for on-site workshops may also be a
> good bargaining tool in obtaining employer educational support.
>
> A thesis or project based program with offerings from other departments
> such as architecture, business, design, computer studies, art,
> anthropology or history would be another attractive feature.
>
> Thank you for asking.
>
> Jerrie Clarke
> Valdez Museum
> Valdez, Alaska
>
> Nancy Glover McCartney wrote:
> >
> > Greetings from Somerset?
> >
> > At 11:13 AM 12/28/98 -0400, you wrote:
> > >I am still seeking input from museum professionals on a proposed new program
> > >at the University of Calgary, Alberta.
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