Patricia Adams, Executive Director
Mission/Purpose - Curious Kids’
Museum
Mission- Curious Kids' Museum (CKM) is "an interactive, hands-on
discovery center for children, dedicated to stimulating curiosity
and awareness in the areas of science, technology, history and culture.
Through its exhibits and programs, The Museum encourages people
of all ages to explore themselves and the world around them in a
unique and open-ended manner." Board of Directors Minutes, Bylaws,
Jan. 1988, Reaffirmed in 2002.
History - CKM began in 1987 as an idea shared by a group
of Twin Cities (St. Joseph and Benton Harbor, MI) educators and
parents to provide the children in Southwest Michigan with alternative
approaches to science education. Challenged by the lack of quality
educational opportunities outside the school environment, the founders'
goal was the establishment of a hands-on museum for children. From
the beginning, CKM has planned with foresight, care, and community
support. Through Lake Michigan College, the founders conducted a
comprehensive feasibility study, finding tremendous community agreement
with the need for such a facility. Building on the best work of
others in planning CKM, the founders visited numerous children's
and science museums, gathering information from around the country.
One year and a half before CKM opened, a community-based Board of
Trustees as well as an Advisory Council were formed, bringing together
diverse talents and commitments by educators, business, healthcare,
& gov’t. The vision for CKM was firmly established: a
place where children and families pursue their natural curiosity
about the world through exploration and play with interactive exhibits,
making learning fun and increasing self-esteem.
The site committee worked with the City of St. Joseph to locate
an appropriate facility, Veteran’s Memorial Hall, a 7,000-sq.
ft. city-owned, minimally-used building, in St. Joseph, on the bluff
overlooking Lake Michigan. It was ideally located near downtown
and able to attract future visitors to locations for shopping and
dining, bringing economic dollars to the community. CKM and the
City jointly renovated the building after much fundraising and contributed
labor and materials. Additional support and funds enabled CKM to
produce the over 100 interactive exhibits in science, culture, and
local history that would welcome 54,282 visitors during its first
15 months, a new destination to an economically challenged area.
Over 800 CKM members support and enjoy the Museum regularly.
Because of its proximity to Benton Harbor, an economically depressed,
predominantly African-American community, CKM board members were
especially concerned that Benton Harbor would be served. The importance
of cultural inclusiveness was recognized as a high priority of the
original Board and remains one today. This belief is practiced through
Outreach programs, free family passes and field trips, special funding
for all school children & groups unable to pay admission, a
new program to bring science and art to Benton Harbor and rural
neighborhoods, free admission and transportation on Halloween and
Christmas vacations, and a partnership in a HUD grant to bring science
and art to a particularly underserved neighborhood. CKM’s
StarLab with 5 constellation/space modules provides the hands-on
curriculum "Night Sky" experience to over 1800 Benton Harbor 6th
grades students annually at Benton Harbor Library-transportation
included. Transportation, a real issue in Benton Harbor, is offered
often.
In recent years, CKM achieved stable attendance of 70,000 annual
visitors by providing a rich range of exhibits and program experiences.
Because this level of attendance often stretched CKM's modest facility
to the limit, the Board planned for expansion. After a successful
$200,000 capital campaign with in-kind community support, CKM opened
an additional 2700 sq. ft. of exhibit space in 1997. Programming
expanded to include weekly family programming every Saturday plus
Wee Discover, Creation Station, Friday FunDay. Outreach Science
serves over 12,000 school, library and afterschool participants
annually. Collaborations with other groups yielded major results
in the form of five community events with 6 new partners these past
years, drawing thousands of people to the area. The Museum continued
its quality growth (MAPIII assessment) with the hiring of a full-time,
paid Executive Director in 1999, two new room-sized exhibits in
2000- 2001, Curious Kids in Outer Space and The Ship-Navigating
the Great Lakes, new job descriptions and performance reviews, accounting
system, manager training, short and Long Range Vision and Goal Planning
for the next five years, and customer service training. Attendance
increased to 72,226 in 2001, the highest ever. Gift shop and Entryway
were renovated. CKM earns 61% of its operating funds while the national
average for museums is 44% (Germann Consultants-2000). "Per square
foot, the amount of CKM activities that cognitively, tactically
and emotional meet the needs of kids ages 1-8 is exceptional. No
others in the Tri-State area do that." (Chicago Tribune writer and
mother of 2 children-- unsolicited spontaneous comment at CKM. Residents’
survey results list CKM in the top five reasons for quality living
in SW Michigan (Economic Benefits Survey-1/02). Triple AAA lists
CKM as one of only 28 Great Experiences for Members (GEM) designated
in Michigan. NASA lists CKM as an educational partner. Growth challenges
CKM as it enters its "Teenage Years" (MAPIII)