
Practice: Guide for Museums
This guide details how to establish a museum program for individuals with Alzheimer's disease and their caregivers. Educational programming is at the heart of a museum's public mission and serves as a gateway for exploring works of art and cultural history. Offerings should extend to all audiences, including individuals with cognitive disabilities. The program should focus on participants' abilities in order to create an accepting and engaging environment in which the disease is a nonissue.
Designing a Program
Program Goals
It is important at the outset to have a clear idea of why you want to develop a program for individuals with Alzheimer's disease and what you hope to accomplish. Think about the following:
- What are your goals?
- What would you consider a successful program?
- Who is your target audience—people with Alzheimer's disease living in their own homes or those in assisted-living facilities, or both? What about caregivers?
- What difference will your program make for your museum? For the community?
- How can you use what you learn through working with this audience to improve other educational programs?
Once you have answered these questions, discuss them with other management staff in your museum. Talk to all the people who will need to support the initiative for it to succeed—involving them in framing the goals encourages their support from the beginning. It is also vital to keep an open line of communication between museum staff involved in the program and individuals affected by Alzheimer's disease and specialists in the field. Their recommendations and input are essential to the success of your program.
Program Content
The museum setting is an ideal environment for both art-looking and art-making experiences. Depending on the size of your museum, the collection, spaces available for creative activities, and other considerations related to staffing and logistics, both of these types of engagement could provide meaningful experiences and could be sustained over time.
When developing the museum's offerings, you will need to take into account the number of programs and the types of activities participants will engage in. It is possible to create separate art-looking and art-making programs, and it is also perfectly feasible to create models wherein participants look at works and subsequently go into classrooms or designated spaces to create their own works.
Program Types
Below are two types of programs you can offer on-site at the museum:
- Programs for groups coming from care organizations—such as residential care centers, nursing homes, or other assisted-living facilities—or from support groups or other organizations. These could be regularly scheduled or offered upon request and could be initiated by either the museum or the outside organization. If possible, send educators from the museum off-site to work with participants at the facility. Ideally, if the condition of participants allows, extended off-site programs should include at least one visit to the museum. You may want to begin by focusing on a small number of care organizations, and then add others over time. If you already work with a specific facility, check to see if they have a dementia division that you could connect with.
- Regularly scheduled programs for individual families in which a person with Alzheimer's disease visits in the company of one or more family members and/or a professional caregiver. These families would come to the museum and tour the galleries with other families in a group led by a museum educator. Participants would be required to register for the program in advance, and registration would be handled on a first-come, first-served basis.
The number of regularly scheduled programs for groups of individual families would depend on the museum's capacity. Start with one event per month or every other month to allow you to make adjustments. As your audience grows, you may consider increasing the number of programs or implement changes.
Dates and Times
The dates and times you select must match the needs of your museum but also the needs of people with Alzheimer's disease.
Identify dates and times that are best for the museum. These might include times when the museum is closed to the public, when other tour groups are not scheduled, or when normal attendance is typically low. With these dates and times in mind, consider what might be best for your participants. Typically, later mornings (after 10:30 a.m.) are better than early mornings for people with Alzheimer's disease, and early afternoon, shortly after lunch, is better than later in the day. Programs should last no longer than two hours. Depending on the time you select, you may want to find a suitable space for participants to have refreshments before or after the gallery program.
Number of Participants
It is important to keep the size of each group small, ideally limited to eight people with Alzheimer's disease plus their family members and caregivers, for a total of sixteen people. You may be able to host more than one group at a time, but the total number of groups your museum can accommodate will be determined by:
- the museum's size.
- the presence of general visitors or other groups, such as school groups or membership groups.
- staffing.
- available funding.
Again, start small. After you gain experience, you will have a better sense of how many people you can accommodate and still offer an effective program. As demand for the program grows, you may find that your requests exceed your capacity. If so, share your needs and limitations with your colleagues to see if adjustments can be made to meet the demand.
Costs
Ideally the program would be free of charge for participants, but it also must be financially sustainable. Some ways to minimize costs are to:
- train volunteer docents or have full-time staff lead the program.
- have participants cover their own transportation costs.
- schedule group tours during open museum hours to avoid additional security costs.
- form partnerships with organizations and agencies that serve people with Alzheimer's disease.
When you are beginning to plan your programs, look for potential sources of funding in local businesses, foundations, and the health-care industry. Invite the museum's decision makers, board members from Alzheimer's disease organizations, and city, county, and state officials to join you on a tour to get them interested in the program. Letters of support from participants may help make a case for additional funding.
Contact Information
Ensure that people interested in the program are able to learn more about it and to register. To the extent possible, establish:
- an email address and a Web site.
- a phone number that connects directly to staff involved in the program.
- a staff member who can answer phone inquiries and handle registration.
Evaluation
Think about how you will evaluate your program from the very beginning, taking into consideration the goals you have established. How will you measure success? What is the best way to collect information? What tools and criteria will you use? Build your evaluation plan as you design your program rather than waiting until the program has already been implemented.

Where art meets science: cultural mediation across disciplines
Source: Science(s) en Occitanie
This MeWell podcast episode explores the meeting point between art, science, technology, and society. It reflects on how artists, researchers, and cultural mediators can work together to make complex scientific ideas more accessible, imaginative, and open to public dialogue.
The episode looks at examples of art-science collaborations, including projects involving artificial intelligence, robotics, sound mediation, and interdisciplinary residencies. It highlights how cultural mediation can create bridges between different forms of knowledge and support audiences in engaging with uncertainty, creativity, and critical reflection.




























