Core Standards for Museums (2024)

Core Standards for Museums (formerly called the Characteristics of Excellence) are the umbrella standards for all museums that are developed through inclusive field-wide dialogue. They are not prescriptive or how-to but broad, outcome-oriented statements that are adaptable and expected of museums of all types and sizes, with each museum fulfilling them in different ways based on its discipline, type, budget, governance structure, and other unique circ*mstances. Core Standards are issued by AAM, in collaboration with the main discipline-specific museum associations that concur the standards are applicable to museums of all types and disciplines.

The Core Standards are grouped into the following categories: Public Trust and Accountability, Mission & Planning, Leadership and Organizational Structure, Collections Stewardship, Education and Interpretation, Financial Stability, and Facilities and Risk Management.

Public Trust and Accountability

Read all of the Public Trust and Accountability standards and professional practices

Mission and Planning

  • The museum has a clear understanding of its mission and communicates why it exists and who benefits as a result of its efforts.

  • All aspects of the museum’s operations are integrated and focused on meeting its mission.
  • The museum’s governing authority and staff think and act strategically to acquire, develop, and allocate resources to advance the mission of the museum.
  • The museum engages in ongoing and reflective institutional planning that includes involvement of its audiences and community.
  • The museum establishes measures of success and uses them to evaluate and adjust its activities.

Read all of the Mission and Planning standards and professional practices

Leadership and Organizational Structure

  • The governance, staffand volunteer structures and processes effectively advance the museum’s mission.
  • The governing authority, staff and volunteers have a clear and shared understanding of their roles and responsibilities.
  • The governing authority, staff, and volunteers legally, ethically, and effectively carry out their responsibilities.
  • The composition, qualifications, and diversity of the museum’s leadership, staff, and volunteers enable it to carry out the museum’s mission and goals.
  • There is a clear and formal division of responsibilities between the governing authority and any group that supports the museum, whether separately incorporated or operating within the museum or its parent organization.

Read all of the Leadership and Organizational Structure standards and professional practices

Collections Stewardship

  • The museum owns, exhibits, or uses collections that are appropriate to its mission.
  • The museum legally, ethically, and effectively manages, documents, cares for, and uses the collections.
  • The museum’s collections-related research is conducted according to appropriate scholarly standards.
  • The museum strategically plans for the use and development of its collections.
  • Guided by its mission, the museum provides public access to its collections while ensuring their preservation.

Read all of the Collections Stewardship standards and professional practices

Education and Interpretation

  • The museum clearly states its overall educational goals, philosophy, and messages, and demonstrates that its activities are in alignment with them.

  • The museum understands the characteristics and needs of its existing and potential audiences and uses this understanding to inform its interpretation.

  • The museum’s interpretive content is based on appropriate research.
  • Museums conducting primary research do so according to scholarly standards.
  • The museum uses techniques, technologies, and methods appropriate to its educational goals, content, audiences, and resources.
  • The museum presents accurate and appropriate content for each of its audiences.

  • The museum demonstrates consistent high quality in its interpretive activities.
  • The museum assesses the effectiveness of its interpretive activities and uses those results to plan and improve its activities.

Read all of the Education and Interpretation standards and professional practices

Financial Stability

  • The museum legally, ethically, and responsibly acquires, manages, and allocates its financial resources in a way that advances its mission.
  • The museum operates in a fiscally responsible manner that promotes its long-term sustainability.

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Facilities and Risk Management

  • The museum allocates its space and uses its facilities to meet the needs of the collections, audience, and staff.
  • The museum has appropriate measures to ensure the safety and security of people, its collections and/or objects, and the facilities it owns or uses.
  • The museum has an effective program for the care and long-term maintenance of its facilities.
  • The museum is clean and well-maintained, and provides for the visitors’ needs.
  • The museum takes appropriate measures to protect itself against potential risk and loss.

Read all of the Facilities and Risk Management standards and professional practices

Read the Core Standards in Plain English

Core Standards for Museums (2024)

FAQs

What are museum standards? ›

Going beyond legal requirements, many museums voluntarily choose to adhere to ethical codes and accountability standards to ensure good stewardship of assets held in the public trust and to maintain public confidence. Standards are consensus documents or written statements of generally accepted principles.

What are the criteria for a museum? ›

The museum owns, exhibits, or uses collections that are appropriate to its mission. The museum legally, ethically, and effectively manages, documents, cares for, and uses the collections. The museum's collections-related research is conducted according to appropriate scholarly standards.

What are the characteristics of a museum? ›

A museum is a permanent public or private institution that may be for-profit or not; it is open to the public and is at the service of society and its development. Museums acquire, conserve, restore, research, share, and exhibit assets that are of cultural interest.

What are some rules in a museum? ›

Please do not:
  • Touch the artwork.
  • Bring food or drink into the museum.
  • Chew gum.
  • Use flash when taking any photos.
  • Bring large bags or backpacks into the gallery.
  • Run through the halls screaming or play your bagpipes in the galleries. (Soft tenor sax is fine.)

What are the 4 C's of museum marketing? ›

The four 'C's of museum marketing are customer value, cost, convenience and communication. In order to create customer value, museums should develop product offerings that match the ever-changing needs of all the segments of their target audience.

What are the 4 main functions of a museum? ›

The functions of a museum are collection, exhibition, conservation, research, and education. Museums collect artifacts and documents to display and research. They hold both temporary and permanent exhibitions to educate the public about culture, art, science and more.

What defines a good museum? ›

Look for a museum that places an emphasis on artifacts, because that is the thing you can get nowhere else. Also important is what objects they have. One of the best examples of this we have seen was the Museum of the Confederacy in Richmond, Virginia.

What makes a successful museum? ›

exhibition design

Good design and interpretation are essential ingredients for a successful museum. It is not enough simply to put objects in a gallery. Visitors need help in understanding objects, making sense of museum collections and putting them in context.

What are the functional requirements of a museum? ›

Furthermore, most museum architecture concepts incorporate the use of multiple kinds of spaces, such as:
  • Public display areas.
  • Storage for exhibits not currently on display.
  • Conservation area.
  • Data collection.
  • Loading/unloading.
  • Packing/unpacking.
  • Workshop.
  • Staff facilities.
Mar 2, 2022

What makes something museum quality? ›

The term “museum quality” is often used when referring to special materials and techniques used to protect fine art photography and preserve the colour rendering for an extremely long time. The exposures and prints at Inside-Gallery are produced using either a classic photographic process (RA-4) or with pigment inks.

What are the attributes for museum? ›

Top Museum Traits
  • They are interactive and tactile. Did you know that the very concept of “hands-on” museums originated with the Boston Children's Museum? ...
  • They are immersive. ...
  • They offer something for all ages. ...
  • They change exhibits frequently. ...
  • They include science and math.

What makes a museum unique? ›

They are the place to preciously guard masters and their ideas, or at times to preserve colonial loot. Museums represent established culture and legitimize movements; but they are also the place collective memories and meanings are made and tenderly held – where lives and histories intertwine, begin and end.

Do and don'ts in museum? ›

Museum Rules
  • Do not touch works of art. ...
  • Keep a safe distance between you and each work of art. ...
  • Use only pencils. ...
  • No leaning on walls or cases (either to write or for physical support). ...
  • No food, drink, or gum is allowed in the galleries.

What is the code of practice for museums? ›

Museums and those who work in and with them should: actively engage and work in partnership with existing audiences and reach out to new and diverse audiences. treat everyone equally, with honesty and respect. provide and generate accurate information for and with the public.

What qualifies as a museum? ›

“A museum is a not-for-profit, permanent institution in the service of society that researches, collects, conserves, interprets and exhibits tangible and intangible heritage.

What are museum classification systems? ›

Traditionally museums classify works of art according to certain aspects and traits. For instance objects may be grouped by medium (painting, drawing, sculpture etc.), style (Baroque, abstract), genre (portrait, narrative, landscape, still life etc.), production site, maker, time period.

Do museums have a code of ethics? ›

The Code of Ethics for Museums serves the interests of museums, their constituencies, and society. The primary goal of AAM is to encourage institutions to regulate the ethical behavior of members of their governing authority, employees, and volunteers.

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