I have had similar problems. I have been told I need a PhD, yet nobody working around here has one. I have also been told to steer clear of museum studies programs--that I really need at least an MA in the field of the museum I want to work in. I am only in art history because I want to work in museums and I started working in an art museum while I was in high school. I am strongly thinking about switching to anthropology or history because I am encountering an attitude (and this is not a personal reflection on the professors or students in the art history division, who are mostly wonderful--it's something that somehow happens when we become a collective) that the role of the art history department is to train students (at least undergraduates--graduates have a Museum Studies certificate option) to be Art Historians in the academy rather than anything else; there is sort of an inertia functioning against applied courses. I feel sort of caught between the Art Studio people, who are more practice oriented, and the Art History people, who are very historically oriented. I also feel that the art history department emphasizes periods and schools and great canons over critical theory and tools to approach a particular object (well, except for the methodologies course); I feel that that's stuff one can look up given the tools to research. My prime passion is for visual/material culture theory and practice and for ethnography of the museum-community relationship. Also, I don't feel like many of the people at the museum often have nearly as much interest in theory as I do. Does anyone else feel any of these competing pressures? For those interested in museum careers, I would strongly recommend the course that people have recommended I follow: joining AAM and local/state/regional museum organizations as an intern/volunteer. If you are a student with a serious interest in working in a museum and you aren't an intern/volunteer or already an employee--what are you waiting for? Most museums are crying out for help! And i have also found that many employees at our museum joined as security guards, events staff, or education volunteers and worked their way up. Peruse the job listings in AVISO, looking at their requirements. And use your AAM card to visit lots of different museums when you travel, and ask any staff you see questions about their jobs and education--I have been doing this for a while and have never gotten a negative response. I even got the Director of the Museum of African Art's card this way! Call your local curators and interview them-- remember that they are busy people, but most of them will be glad to sit down for an hour and talk when they don't have a show going up. Kathy Mancuso (an undergraduate working it as hard as she can) ========================================================= Important Subscriber Information: The Museum-L FAQ file is located at http://www.finalchapter.com/museum-l-faq/ . You may obtain detailed information about the listserv commands by sending a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "help" (without the quotes). If you decide to leave Museum-L, please send a one line e-mail message to [log in to unmask] . The body of the message should read "Signoff Museum-L" (without the quotes).