Signature Experience Award to fund student鈥檚 travel to conference in Philadelphia
Student Services CenterThanks to her Signature Experience Award, Nicole Ursin, a junior double majoring in history and anthropology, will present her research at the Society for Applied Anthropology Conference in Philadelphia, April 3-7. During the fall 2017 semester, Ursin was one of 79 University of Arkansas at Little Rock students to be awarded $1,000 from Chancellor Andrew Rogerson鈥檚 undergraduate research grant program to offset costs for a one-semester project or experience in research or creative works.鈥淭he Signature Experience Awards are allowing students to achieve more with their academic research,鈥 Ursin said. 鈥淚 would not have been able to afford this trip to Philadelphia without it.鈥 With a financial burden lifted, Ursin was able to focus on her conference presentation and the progression of her project, 鈥淯nderstanding Museum Demographics: Historic Arkansas Museum.鈥 鈥淚鈥檝e interned and worked in museums for the past three years,鈥 Ursin said. 鈥淢y goal was to do a project that showed the complexities of museums and addressed one of the problems that museums are facing.鈥Through her research, Ursin found that most museums design exhibits and programs to 聽attract diverse audiences, but in reality, typically draw crowds of little demographic diversity. To understand why this happens, Ursin began investigating the demographics of museum visitors in Little Rock.鈥淭o reach diverse audiences, museums must first understand the factors driving the demographics they presently represent,鈥 she said.During the summer of 2017, Ursin begin collecting data from visitors and employees at Historic Arkansas Museum. She later analyzed her findings, interviewed museum professionals, and researched the racial issues concerning museums. Finally, she sought to develop a definition of diversity that would be applicable to Arkansas museums. 鈥淭his project has strengthened my interest in museum anthropology and has made me more interested in how museums can diversify their exhibits and audiences,鈥 Ursin said.Ursin鈥檚 project is a direct reflection of a suggestion proposed by the American Association of Museums in 2010 that promoted fieldwork that would contribute to tourism and heritage studies in America. 聽聽Ursin is currently in the final stages of her project, composing a detailed write-up of her work for local museum professionals, which she will present at the conference, as well as drafting an article for publication in anthropology or museum study journals. After graduating from 糖心Vlog传媒 Little Rock in 2019, Ursin plans to pursue a master鈥檚 degree in museum anthropology, and afterward, work for a museum.