Course aims: On satisfying the requirements of this course, students will have the knowledge and skills to: 1. Evaluate the management structure of different types of museums, collecting institutions and heritage organisations in Australia and globally, with particular reference to structures of organisation, governance, models of leadership and management theories applied to the public, not-for-profit or private cultural, collecting and heritage context. 2. Compare and analyse the varying purposes and structures of contemporary museums, collecting institutions and heritage organisations in the context of reviewing relationships to government and industry policy frameworks, including primary research using annual reports and policy documents. 3. Demonstrate the conceptual and analytic skills required to interpret museums, collecting institutions and heritage organisations in the context of strategic planning, problem solving, change management, risk and disaster management, finance and resource allocation, governance, marketing, performance and creativity management, and knowledge management. Learning outcomes: 1. To gain skills in written and verbal expression for a variety of relevant professional and academic purposes that include essays and consultancy reports, and gain understanding about the purpose and style of corporate institutional documents and reportage. 2. To develop skills in interdisciplinary thinking and the ability to use relevant theoretical ideas based in management principles to develop case studies out of a range of primary data. 3. To gain skills required for humanities research and museum work. This includes data-collection, analysis, and verbal and written presentation at the standard of a postgraduate degree. 4. To gain understanding and a basic set of management skills required for working in the cultural, collecting, and heritage sectors, including a functioning knowledge of current industry standards, protocols, policy frameworks, and approaches to strategic planning, and an understanding of challenges to the sector. |