Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century
Skills
Marsha L. Semmel
IMLS Deputy Director for Museum Services and Director
for Strategic Partnerships
Chicago Public Library
July 11, 2009
Thank you, Dr. Radice, for your introduction. I also
want to thank the MacArthur Foundation , especially
Connie Yowell and Ben Stokes, for this opportunity.
Thanks, too, to Mary Dempsey and Amy Eschelman of the
Chicago Public Library, and Nicole Pinkard and the members
of the Digital Youth Network who are here. I was just
talking with Connie about the importance of serendipity,
and in some ways, it was wonderful serendipity that
has led us to know the people at MacArthur better, as
a result of our annual WebWise conference, where we
showcase cutting edge work done in the digital space
by libraries and museums.
MacArthur Foundation was a wonderful partner in our
most recent WebWise conference, and we were all pleased
to meet a number of the MacArthur grantees working on
digital learning projects. Those conversations led us
to where we are today. As MacArthur’s Julia Stasch
eloquently noted last night, research is continuing
to affirm that much important learning happens outside
the classroom, and libraries and museums are core community
learning resources. As the learning landscape is changing—especially
in response to new technologies—our libraries
and museums are adapting to accommodate new learning
styles and possibilities.
For our Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century Skills
project, we worked with a national task force of library
and museum leaders, an internal IMLS team, and the e-Luminate
group (a consulting firm specializing in 21st century
skills), to position libraries and museums as players
in this new learning landscape and to provide a framework
for libraries and museums to become even more effective.
As the project developed, we met with more than 100
library and museum leaders across the country to get
their input.
The project includes three components: a policy report;
a self-assessment tool; and an simple online diagnostic
tool—all designed to provide the broader context
for the 21st century skills movement; a discussion of
what our institutions have to contribute to learning
across the lifetime; and a rubric helping libraries
and museums determine where they fit on a continuum
from “early,” through “tranisition”
to “21st century” across a host of organizational
functions and domains.
In important ways, the YouMedia Center embodies the
principles in our report:
And, as we heard last evening from the Carnegie Mellon
design team who helped to structure this space, it is
only the beginning. The YouMedia Center is a platform
that requires the “you”(th) to make it come
alive.
Similarly, Museums, Libraries, and 21st Century Skills
is a platform, a framework that will only fulfill its
promise when libraries and museums read it, tinker with
it, kick its tires, share it with colleagues and other
partners in the community, push back on it, and make
it their own.
Thank you very much.