Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 254
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-5381-0635-8 • Hardback • November 2018 • $98.00 • (£75.00)
978-1-5381-0636-5 • Paperback • November 2018 • $44.00 • (£35.00)
978-1-5381-0637-2 • eBook • November 2018 • $41.50 • (£35.00)
Randi Korn is Founding Director of RK&A, a company that partners with all types of cultural organizations to plan and evaluate their work around achieving impact. She was editor of The Gauge, editorial board member of Museums and Social Issues, and reviewer for Curator: The Museum Studies Journal and InternationalJournal of Museum Management and Curatorship. She was the recipient of the Southeastern Museum Education Division Museum Educator of the Year award from the National Art Education Association (NAEA). She taught evaluation at The George Washington University for 18 years, has lectured at the University of Maryland, Johns Hopkins University, and University of Washington and was a visiting scholar at the University of Michigan.
List of Figures
List of Tables
Foreword
Acknowledgements
Preface
Chapter 1: Toward a Philosophy of Intentionality
Chapter 2: Origins of the Cycle of Intentional Practice
Chapter 3: Learning about the Cycle of Intentional Practice
Chapter 4: Intentional-Practice Principles
Chapter 5: Intentional Practice Exercises
Chapter 6: Case Studies
Chapter 7: Learning, the Continuous Journey
Appendices
Impact Framework
Proposed Schedule for Intentional Practice Work
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
[Korn] presents a painstaking and methodical approach to her Cycle of Intentional Practice—planning, evaluation, reflection, and alignment in order for museums to have a more positive impact on people’s lives inside and outside the museum walls. . . . Korn brings a wealth of multidisciplinary museum, academic, and professional evaluation experiences to the table, and her book is an excellent resource for museums willing to take the journey of intentional practice. The basic principles have deep roots in the history and evolution of museums. She offers a thoroughly researched and well-thought-out framework with tools for transforming museums that have not been engaged in intentional practice, as well as for museums that are seeking more effective ways to evaluate their ongoing impact.— caa.reviews
At once logical and elegantly presented, this book describes the Cycle of Intentional Practice - a tested framework for making museums increasingly relevant to the audiences they seek to positively impact. Certainly Randi Korn ranks among the clearest, most intentional thinkers in the museum field today.
— Douglas S. Jones, Director of the Florida Museum of Natural History, former Chair of the Board, American Alliance of Museums
For two decades, Randi Korn has been the museum sector’s thought and practice leader around the why and how of intentional impacts. With the sector’s attention to many community and environmental contexts rising fast – such as social inequity, biodiversity loss, climate change, and sustainability – aiming for, and achieving, intentional impacts have arguably ceased to be an option. In the Anthropocene, here is a tried-and-tested toolkit to guide museums towards the optimization of the external return on their investments.
— Emlyn Koster, director, North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences
Korn offers museum professionals essential intentional-practice principles, case studies, and exercises, inviting museums to develop their own impact statements and frameworks that will ultimately unify colleagues around a shared vision for visitor experiences. This book guides readers through a collaborative, focused, passionate, risk-taking journey.— Beverly Serrell, Director, Serrell & Associates and author of "Exhibit Labels: An Interpretive Approach"