Recent Internships |
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Collections Management Internships - Summer 2007 Internship held by Allison Powell
I hope to pursue a career in museum education and exhibit development and the skills I have learned here at Mount Vernon will be essential to my future success. Not only have I learned about archaeology (previously a totally foreign science to me) and the preservation and care of a collection, but I have also learned how to effectively manage resources (both time, money and employees) by observing the preservation collections manager Jen Bryant. I have also learned about all of the hard work and dedication that goes on prior to the development of an interpretive and educational plan and before exhibits open to the public. I have had the opportunity to do research, clean and store artifacts, dig on an archaeological site and interact with visitors. Archaeologists and collections managers may not be immediately visible to visitors but the work that they do directly relates to visitor experience at an historic site or museum. This internship has provided me with a firsthand opportunity to experience those efforts and to understand the myriad of people that contribute to a museum’s success. This has been a great summer as well as a really educational and valuable one. I’m so grateful that I’ve had the experience of working at Mount Vernon and I know that everything I’ve learned here will be indispensable to me in the future.
Internship held by Abbi Huderle
From this experience, I have realized that my career interests lie more in the direction of preservation and conservation, but of archaeological finds as opposed to textiles. And that’s something that could have otherwise taken me several summers’ worth of internships to recognize! While it is my goal to live and work in England after graduation, I have learned that much in museum work is applicable everywhere, Europe included. Working at Mount Vernon has taught me that it is important to understand the entire collections process, from excavation to cleaning and conservation to storage, because in order to make the artifacts the top priority, one must be able to communicate with all the professionals involved in these processes.
Archaeology Lab and Field Internships - Winter / Spring 2007 Internship held by Aly Sabatino
Internship held by Devin Chambers
That has been one of the many things that I've gotten a chance to do here, and to learn about. My internship at Mount Vernon as definitely been an unforgettable experience for me, and I think it has helped set me in the direction that I want to go in my life. As I am about to go off into the wonderful world of college, I feel like I am the better for it, since taking this internship.
Public Out Reach Internship - Fall 2006 Internship held by Lisa Seaman This fall I have been helping the Mount Vernon Archaeology Department with their public outreach. I am a senior at the University of Maryland obtaining a dual degree in Journalism and American Studies. I hope to work for a museum or an historical site in either education or public relations. Interning at Mount Vernon has combined skills I have learned in both Journalism and American Studies. I was able to create a new brochure for the Archaeology Department using the redesign techniques, including the presence of white space (the presence of white paper, and no text), and creating a double read (the ability to initially identify what is important, and read further for more information if desired). I have been able to analyze the text to understand what is most interesting to audiences and what would most interest them about archaeology and then further extend their knowledge about archaeology at Mount Vernon.
Finally, during my internship here, I was fortunate enough to see the opening of the new Education Center and Museum. In order to create more interest in both the new exhibits and for the Archaeology Department, I created a scavenger hunt for people to look for specific artifacts found in archaeological excavations. This innovative idea will further the understanding about the importance of archaeology not just at Mount Vernon but at all historic sites. I have been very fortunate to have this internship in the fall of my senior year at Maryland. Although both degrees I am earning are relevant to my future goals, this internship has provided me with a better understanding of each one separately as well as an understanding about how they tie in together.
GIS Internship - Summer 2005 Internship held by Anne Mason This summer I am completing an internship with the archaeology department digitizing all the excavations the Mount Vernon archaeologists have dug and feeding them into a GIS (geographic information system) computer program called ArcGIS. ArcGIS will allow Mount Vernon to examine their excavations in digital space, make maps, and perform analysis that may have been difficult or impossible without such software.
I am a Master’s student at George Mason University majoring in Applied History, with a concentration in “New Media and Technology.” The New Media program at George Mason is a pioneering program that merges history with technologies such as the World Wide Web or GIS to understand or present history in new and exciting ways. As part of my Master’s program, I created a website for my HIST 697 class. I also needed to complete an internship and Mount Vernon was in need someone to help them with their budding GIS program. I anticipate this internship leading into my research paper that is required for my degree. The goal of my internship is to create a GIS mapset of the archaeology excavations for the plantation. As the Mount Vernon archaeologists excavate the different layers of soil, they create paper maps to help them understand and document the excavations. My job started with digitally redrawing these maps using AutoCAD. In some cases, this meant drawing and coding individual bricks of a building foundation, or drawing and coding large numbers of post holes. After many hours of drawing I was ready to put these maps into ArcGIS. This proved simpler than I thought it would be. The digitized drawings were already scaled in AutoCAD, meaning the maps have been sized to their real-life sizes. One of the restoration staff members had already created a map of the plantation in GIS, which made my job much easier. Basically, the AutoCAD drawings just needed to be told where they existed on the earth. I was impressed that ArcGIS knew how to interpret the layers I created in AutoCAD such as brick foundations, mortar, and postholes. All in all, I was surprised and impressed that the software was so easy to use. But then again, I am a computer geek, so a less techno-savvy person may have found this more difficult.
While the maps are just starting to be examined in GIS, already the rewards of using GIS are apparent. Many excavations can be examined together and the larger landscape can be better understood. The same brick drain appeared in more than one excavation, and it is likely that other features exist across excavations as well. ArcGIS gives not only a new and exciting way to help interpret Mount Vernon to its visitors, but also a new way to help preserve and understand the plantation. |
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