Museums
Since its inception, the certificate program has worked closely with museums in the Washington, D.C. area.
The Certificate in Museum Scholarship and Material Culture (MSMC) program at the University of Maryland provides a unique experience for graduate students and museum professionals alike, to teach, learn and collaborate on exhibits, displays and interpretations of museums and material culture.
The Smithsonian Institution is a partner of the MSMC certificate program and plays an important role in not only hosting students for their practicum projects but also in providing museum professionals to instruct the introductory course for the program.
The MSMC plans to develop partnerships with museums in the Washington, D.C. area to continue to provide graduate students, professionals and museums opportunities for collaboration and growth.
If you or your institution are interested in participating with our growing certificate program, contact the certificate director, Mary Alexander.
Smithsonian Institution
The Smithsonian Institution (SI) has partnered with the Museum Scholarship and Material Culture (MSMC) certificate program since its inception. The SI and its museum professionals have played an invaluable part of Maryland’s MSMC certificate as committee members, hosts for student practicum projects and teachers for the “Introduction to Museum Scholarship” course.
This partnership between the Smithsonian and the University of Maryland gives MSMC students a well-rounded approach to the certificate’s three main questions:
- How do museums function as social and historical institutions?
- How is material culture used as evidence in museums?
- In what ways do exhibits, collections and other museum efforts express ideas and create knowledge?
Students in the certificate program may gain access to the Smithsonian’s researchers and cultural centers in the Washington, D.C. area. Classroom discussion is paired with guest speakers, visits to exhibitions and “behind-the-scenes” work at the SI’s museums and centers.
Prince George’s County Museums
Below is a list of museums and cultural centers in Prince George’s County, Maryland, to serve as a resource. We’ve dedicated a special page for these institutions because the University of Maryland campus is located in this community. Some of these museums have hosted students for their practicum research for the certificate and class field trips as part of the Research Seminar course.
Prince George’s County History Consortium
The consortium provides a more extensive list of cultural and natural sites of historic significance in Prince George’s County, including parks, churches and cemeteries, community centers and more.
Anacostia Trails Heritage Area (ATHA) - (Based in) Hyattsville
Belair Mansion - Bowie
Belair Stable Museum - Bowie
Billingsley House Museum - Upper Marlboro
Bowie Train Station Museum - Bowie
College Park Aviation Museum - College Park
Darnall’s Chance - Upper Marlboro
Dorsey Chapel - Glenn Dale
Fort Washington Museum & Park - Fort Washington
Gateway Arts Center - Brentwood
Goddard Space Flight Center - Greenbelt
Greenbelt Museum - Greenbelt
Hyattsville Preservation Association - Hyattsville
Lakeland Community Heritage Project - College Park
Laurel Museum - Laurel
Marietta House Museum - Glenn Dale
Montpelier Mansion - Laurel
Mount Calvert Historical and Archaeological Park - Upper Marlboro
National Children’s Museum - National Harbor
National Colonial Farm Museum - Accokeek
National Museum of Language - College Park
Oxon Cove Park and Oxon Hill Farm - Oxon Hill
Patuxent Wildlife Research Refuge & National Wildlife Visitor Center - Laurel
Poplar Hill on His Lordship’s Kindness - Clinton
Prince George’s African American Museum & Cultural Center - North Brentwood
Prince George’s County Historical Society - Riverdale
Radio-Television Museum - Bowie
Riversdale (Calvert Mansion) - Riverdale
Surratt House Museum - Clinton
The Phillips Collection
The Phillips Collection has partnered with the Museum Scholarship and Material Culture (MSMC) certificate since 2016 when the “Introduction to Museum Scholarship” course assisted the Phillips with redesigning an exhibit space and entranceway within the museum. The endeavor allowed students to put classroom-based knowledge and ideas into practice.
Students in the certificate program may gain access to the Phillips’s cultural centers in the Washington, D.C. area. Classroom discussion is paired with guest speakers, visits to exhibitions and “behind-the-scenes” work at the galleries and centers.
On Campus Exhibition Spaces
Below is a list of museums, art galleries and other cultural resources that can be found on the University of Maryland, College Park campus. These institutions have provided opportunities to certificate students to see and get firsthand knowledge about the practice of museum scholarship.