Detailed overview:
NatSCA2017 : NatSCA Conference "Evolving Ideas: provocative new ways of working with collections"
Title: NatSCA2017 : NatSCA Conference "Evolving Ideas: provocative new ways of working with collections"
Title abbreviated: NatSCA2017
Identifier: http://www.natsca.org/conference2017
Venue: Cambridge
Start date: 2017-04-20
End date: 2017-04-21
Creator: NatSCA = Natural Science Collections Association
Abstract: The Natural Science Collections Association will be holding their next annual conference & AGM on 20 & 21 April 2017. The event will be hosted by the University Museum of Zoology, Cambridge. This conference, "Evolving Ideas: provocative new ways of working with collections", aims to generate real food for thought for anyone interested in enhancing how museums with natural sciences collections operate. We want to provoke, explore and inspire new ways of working. What have you learnt that the rest of the sector would benefit from knowing? What would you like to see museums with natural sciences collections do differently? The #NatSCA2017 conference theme is wide – we want two days of sharing and discussion about how the sector could do things better. What are the outcomes of your recent projects that you think colleagues in other museums would benefit from? Have you developed a new practice that you want to share? Do you have a provocation for changing the way we do things? The range of possible topics is broad, but all sessions should focus on findings that will be useful for other delegates to hear, or provocations for changing practice. [Information of the supplier]
Subject: Museum activities and services, Collecting (570.75)
» find similar sources!
Spatial coverage: British Isles
Audience: Experts
Language: English
Format: website
Resource type: Conferences and Congresses (archive)
Access: free
Metadata update date: 2017-04-27
Metadata provider: UBFfm
URL of this vifabio-resource: http://www.vifabio.de/en/iqfBio/detail/9307
© Virtuelle Fachbibliothek Biologie (vifabio)
 Print window Close window