Museum Accreditation
The American Alliance of Museums is the national body for museums in our country.
Institutions can sign up for memberships and reap all sorts of benefits, such as
conferences, question boards, updates in the field, and numerous other rewards.
One area promoted and glamourized is accreditation. The AAM will accredit any museum
in the country that follows the specific guidelines to operate at a higher standard. From staffing
and funding to education and collection care, an accredited museum displays how to best
run their organization. While not required, accreditation is a prestigious accomplishment;
only about 3% of all US museums have received accreditation…and only 11 total in Kansas!
Once accomplished, a museum retains its accreditation for ten years.
Here at Old Cowtown Museum, we are reaching the end of our ten-year accreditation; so
earlier this year we started our reaccreditation process. Financials, programming,
fundraising, events, educational opportunities, and so many other things are needed to
explain who each museum is. This complete step one.
Once our application is read, step two is a site visit. Two members of the accreditation
committee will visit our museum to see the buildings, exhibits, staff, and board of trustees
to gain a sense of how our museum improves the community. When we pass our site visit, we retain our accreditation.