Remove Artist Remove Collaboration Remove Money Remove Teen
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Sustaining Innovation Part 3: Interview With Sarah Schultz of the Walker Art Center

Museum 2.0

In my experience, innovation is about flexibility, capacity, and collaborative relationships. Guard staff who are willing to let an artist step between two panes of glass to perform. Every organization has pockets of restricted and unrestricted money. It's too small to write a grant for, too big to assume we just have the money.

Arts 46
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Equity in Arts Funding: We're Not There Yet. We're Not Even Close.

Museum 2.0

We may say that we want to support programming and cultural opportunities for low-income and non-white people, but that's not where the money is going. Even as demographics change and public participation in the arts shifts away from these Euro-traditional formats, the money still flows down the old pathways.

Arts 52
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Meditations on Relevance, Part 3: Who Decides What's Relevant?

Museum 2.0

Develop collaborations and programs, keeping in mind what you have learned. Once we've identified assets and needs, we seek out collaborators and project ideas. Here are two examples: Our Youth Programs Manager, Emily Hope Dobkin, wanted to find a way to support teens at the museum. Subjects to Change was born.

Teen 20
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Temple Contemporary and the Puzzle of Sharing Powerful Processes

Museum 2.0

They were there for artist talks. Every other year, they convene TUPAC, a group of 35 outside advisors, including teens, college students, Temple University professors, artists, philanthropists, and community leaders. There's no money to fix them. In most of these kinds of projects, the number of collaborators is finite.

Process 20
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The Participatory Nonprofit?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

"While none of these approaches cost a lot of money, they certainly require staff time to support. According to recent study from Pew Internet and American Life project, more than one-half of teens have created media content and roughly one-third have shared ocntent. Go read it. Expressions (media creation, mashups, etc).

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NPTechTag Roundup: Election Debriefs and Wikis in Your Kitchen!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

It will be interesting to see if this advice holds true for the voters of the future based on Dannah Boyd's post " What i mean when i say "email is dead" in reference to teens. The concept is simple as Nick Booth writes: "Some people really get it and move quickly to innovate in the way they collaborate online.

Wiki 50