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Re: Safety Training Course
- To: <texcons@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: Re: Safety Training Course
- From: "Mary W. Ballard" <BallardM@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 25 Mar 2002 10:08:09 -0500
- Cc: <cahawks@xxxxxxx>
- Message-id: <sc9ef716.056@simail1.si.edu>
- Sender: owner-texcons@xxxxxxxxxxxx
For those who live in the Washington, D.C. area or who plan to be in the area during the summer, George Washington University will be offering this special course:
GW University Special Topics Course
Introduction to Health and Safety in Museums (MSTD 297.80) (PUBH 290.33)
Credit Hours: 2 - PUBH, 3- MSTD
(students who register through MSTD will complete an additional research
project with one of the course directors)
Prerequisites: None
Course Dates: Summer Session, 2002 (09 July -15 August)
Registration: Begins 4 April 2002. Registration information is available at
www.gwu.edu/~specprog/essentials
Course Registration Nos.
91576 (PUBH 290.33, 2 credit hours)
92571 (MSTD 297.80, 3 credit hours)
Time: Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5:10-7:00 pm
Web Site: TBA
Course Directors: Catharine Hawks (MSTD) and David Goldsmith (PubH)
Methods of Instruction: Lectures, visits to Smithsonian facilities, Web
quizzes, term paper/presentation
Grading Methods: Best 4 of 5 quizzes -25%; Presentation /paper - 65%;
Class participation - 10%
Course Learning Objectives
1) To describe the major health and safety issues in museums and related
Institutions relative to employees, volunteers, and visitors.
2) To identify major health and safety hazards that might be encountered in
museum operations (exhibit preparation, collection management and care,
research, and interpretive programming).
3) To provide state of the art occupational safety and health management for
museums.
4) To provide an understanding of the pertinent regulations and the role of
regulatory agencies in ensuring safety in museums.
5) To identify procedures to improve public safety and staff emergency
response in museums.
6) To describe methods of controlling museum hazards and preventing
occupational and environmental health effects, including occupational safety,
fire prevention, electrical safety, machine guarding, local exhaust,
ventilation, hazardous waste handling, and personal protection equipment.
Course Schedule
WEEK 1
Session 1 Tue 09 July (Instructors: Goldsmith, Hawks, Makos)
Introduction to the course
Bibliographies and technical references/resources
Overview of health & safety hazards in museum-related work including hazards
to museum visitors and volunteers
Session 2 Thr 11 July (Instructor: McCann)
Overview of safety and safety programs: program administration, health and
safety committees, inspections, emergency procedures, employer/employee
rights and responsibilities, workers compensation, regulations, job hazard
analyses, OSHA Hazard Communication Standard, Chemical Hygiene Programs,
Materials Safety Data Sheets (MSDS), and OSHA construction standard vs
general industry standards (e.g., for exhibit preparation)
WEEK 2
Session 1 Tue 16 July (Instructor: Goldsmith/Guidotti)
Overview of toxicology; toxicology of specific biological, chemical,
radiological hazards as outlined in Week 1; medical toxicology as it applies
to museum staff and visiting public
Session 2 Thr 18 July (Instructor: Goldsmith)
Toxicology continued; routes of entry, how standards are set (risk
assessment), differences between occupational and community health standards
WEEK 3
Session 1 Tue 23 (Instructors: McCann/Ertel)
Chemical handling, storage, and labeling, with emphasis on laboratory safety
and exhibit shops
Hazardous waste disposal
Session 2 Thr 25 July (Instructors: Hawks, Makos)
Outlines for papers/presentations due
Special Topics: Object testing for contaminants, NAGPRA issues, disclosure
statements for loans, deaccessions, repatriation agreements, pest control
methods, contaminated storage/exhibit furniture, hazards in field work,
exhibition safety for the public
WEEK 4
Session 1 Tue 30 July (Instructor: McCann))
Role of monitoring and surveillance: exposure monitoring, biological
monitoring, medical surveillance, permissible exposure standards
Session 2 Thr 01 August (Instructors: McCann/Ertel)
Health Hazard Control: Ventilation; substitution; personal protective
equipment including respirators; radiation protection; biohazards protection
in field and laboratory settings
WEEK 5
Session 1 (Museum Support Center, Smithsonian) Tue 06 August (Instructors:
Ridgway/Dietrich)
Safety hazard evaluation and control: ergonomics; physical plant safety
Disaster and emergency medical situations; safety in emergency response and
recovery
Session 2 (Museum Support Center, Smithsonian) Thr 08 August (Instructor:
Stemen)
Fire protection: fire codes; fire protection systems; fire protection in
public displays and fluid collection storage
WEEK 6
Session 1 Tue 13 August (Instructors: Goldsmith, Hawks)
Final papers due
Discussions of special topic (e.g., contamination of cultural property by the
WTC disaster)
Session 2 Thr 15 August (Instructors: Goldsmith, Hawks)
Oral Presentations and discussions
Course summary
___________________________
Catharine Hawks
Conservator
2419 Barbour Road
Falls Church VA 22043-3026 USA
t/f 703.876.9272
cahawks@xxxxxxx