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Who's Leaving the Field and Why Data Matters

Leaving

Claire Milldrum on Paul Orselli's blog. Pictured with her Corgi, she is apparently much happier in her post-museum life and for that Leadership Matters is glad. We have written probably more than anyone else about work in the museum world. We have ranted about salaries, about living wages, and about the ridiculous cost of graduate school which, as Ms. Milldrum points out, seems to be the entry ticket for even the lowliest, most pathetic position at the biggest, fanciest museums. So don't get us wrong when you read what comes next. First and foremost one blog post is not data so everyone who commented as if this were a daily occurrence, where's the data? Do we actually know how many young professionals leave the museum field before they actually start, scared off by the thought of low salaries (where there's plenty of data) and high graduate school debt (where at least we have raw costs if not the number of students taking loans)? Second, Milldrum conflates several things: galleries, libraries and museums, and work and internships, in all three sectors. While at the entry/internship level they may appear alike, in reality there are differences among the three fields. She also reports that she's sad she's not starting graduate school this month, but says she got into one of "the top grad schools in Library Science, and at one of them, a guaranteed student work job in my subfield." Again, confusing because a masters in library science is not a degree in Museum Studies, art history or public history, it's an MLS which provides entry to a field where the median salary is $57, 680, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and where the American Library Association lobbies hard for entry level salaries. Last, in my experience--and admittedly it's only my experience--libraries do hire humans possessing only a bachelor's degree for jobs not internships. They are not librarian jobs, but they are not internships, and allow a young professional a necessary window into the sector before they make a commitment to graduate school. So while Milldrum's career path was confusing, her charges about the museum world weren't. It has a long and sorrowful history of maid-of-all-work internships that prepare participants for nothing except debt. And those type of internships are a not-so-subtle race and class barrier. (See The Diversity vs. Salary Question). Clearly, once she decided to forego graduate school and the museum world, Milldrum had the skill set to walk into a well-paying job in non-profit finance. And why couldn't she have gotten a similar job in the museum world that would have allowed her a normal work week and a chance to go to the dentist? She's clearly smart. She's a good writer, and based her description of working both one job for pay, and another as a volunteer to build her resume, she's a hard worker. Is the museum world really so rarified that it couldn't stand an infusion of some folks with newly-minted bachelor's degrees? I mean we love what we do, but this isn't oncology after all. Milldrum's post isn't data, but perhaps it's a bellwether, and we owe it to ourselves to acknowledge that and compile the data. In the meantime, if you're in museum HR or director of a small museum, would it hurt if you lobbied for an entry level position or two without a graduate degree? Is a master's degree necessary for every job in your institution? If not, be the person who breaks the mold. Hire someone with smarts and passion and see what happens. The field will likely be better for it. Joan Baldwin

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