Skip to main content
Denison University Home
  • About Denison +
  • Academics +
  • Admission & Aid +
  • Campus Life +
  • Career Exploration +
  • News & Events +
  • Arts
  • Athletics & Recreation
  • Alumni
  • Parents
  • Title IX / Non-Discrimination
Prefer browsing? Check out the A-Z directory
Popular
  • Doane Renovation
  • Employment
  • Make a Payment
  • Academic Calendar
  • MyDenison
  • Fast Facts
Prefer browsing? Check out the A-Z Directory
Popular
  • Doane Renovation
  • Employment
  • Make a Payment
  • Academic Calendar
  • MyDenison
  • Fast Facts
Results

No results match your search.

Try being less specific, using different keywords, or checking your spelling.

About Denison

  • Explore Granville & Columbus
  • Fast Facts
  • Our History
  • President's Office
  • Sustainability
Academics

Denison’s purpose is to inspire and educate its students to become autonomous thinkers, discerning moral agents and active citizens of a democratic society.

  • Majors
  • Courses
  • Academic Calendar
  • Library
  • Center for Global Programs
  • Study Abroad
Admission & Aid

We are thrilled that you are considering Denison during your college search, and we look forward to getting to know more about you.

  • Apply for Admission
  • Apply for Financial Aid
  • Visit Campus
  • Virtual Tour
  • Request Information
  • Meet the Staff
Campus Life

Our students bring diverse talents, interests, backgrounds, and experiences to campus; see how Denison helps them make this college their own.

  • Clubs & Organizations
  • Housing
  • Sustainability
  • Wellness Center
Career Exploration

  • Career Center
  • Entrepreneurship & Consulting
  • Fellowships & Research
  • Professional Development & Certificates
News & Events

Denison's latest news, stories, and upcoming events from all around the hill and beyond.

  • Events & Athletics Schedule
  • Academic Calendar
  • Press Releases
  • Big Red Athletics
  • Denison Magazine
Latest University News
Professor Margot Singer

Professor Margot Singer explores layered identities in new book

May 27, 2025
The Men's Tennis team with their trophy in front of the final scoreboard.

A dream fulfilled: Denison wins its first NCAA men’s tennis title

May 23, 2025
Photo of Matt Tanney, new associate vice president and director of athletics

Denison names Matt Tanney new associate vice president and director of athletics

May 20, 2025
Denison University Home
Map / Tour
Events
Give
Apply
  • Search
  • Menu
  1. Campus Map
  2. Denison Museum
  3. Teaching & Learning

Teaching & Learning

An overview of the teaching and learning opportunities available made possible by the Denison Museum.

Navigate

Denison Museum
Denison Museum



  • Exhibitions
  • Events, Programs, & Workshops
  • The Collection
  • Internship Program
  • Teaching & Learning
    Teaching & Learning

    An overview of the teaching and learning opportunities available made possible by the Denison Museum.

    • Forms, Policies, Publications
    Close submenu panel
  • Plan your visit
  • About
  • Contacts
Museum staff lead a student tour of an exhibition.
A student leans in to closely view a piece of art.
Museum staff take visitors through the Museum.
Students gather around an exhibition piece taking notes during a class.
A group of students and faculty posting after a class activity at the Museum

A teaching museum with a focus on helping faculty and students

The Denison Museum helps faculty and students integrate objects of historical, cultural, and artistic value into their academic curriculum. The Museum believes that a studied and researched collection is a happy collection. We encourage faculty, students, and scholars alike to use the collection for classroom and scholarly work.

Schedule a Class Visit and More

The Museum presents exhibitions and creates tailored class experiences that enhance student learning across the disciplines. Museum staff work closely with faculty members to understand their needs, generate ideas for collaboration, and create engaging activities designed to promote specific learning goals. Activities range from casual visits designed to introduce students and faculty to the resources and possibilities offered by the Museum, to collaboratively curated exhibitions and rigorous lesson plans that integrate object-based learning into the core curriculum of a course.

Deepening student learning across the disciplines

Each year, more than a hundred classes from across the college engage with the Museum’s collection and exhibitions. For example:

  • Geoscience students learn observational techniques that inform their laboratory work.
  • Spanish students practice their language skills by analyzing objects, writing labels, and making oral presentations.
  • Visual Arts students learn about color by examining works of art.
  • Sociology students examine Central American Guna textiles as they explore the social dynamics of international development.

For quite a few students, this experience marks the first time they’ve ever set foot in a museum.

Students and faculty gathered in a circle discussing an exhibition.

A space to reflect and ask questions

The 21st century academic museum is a transformative place that helps visitors see and reflect in new ways on the complex and dynamic world around them. It offers space to wonder, ask questions, think critically, collaborate, and reach in new directions. Far more than just a showcase for fine art or a resource only for students of the visual arts, the contemporary museum is a catalyst for deep inquiry into a wide range of issues, innovative pedagogy, and interdisciplinary collaboration.

A class of Denison students displaying their classwork in response to an art exhibition at the museum.

Object-based learning

Object-based learning (OBL) is an experiential pedagogy that focuses on close, tactile interaction with physical materials (including works of art, cultural artifacts, documents, specimens, etc.) and sensory experiences. As an approach to learning “about, with and through objects,” OBL promotes intellectual discourse and exploration. It prompts inquiry into complex socio political or scientific issues; it helps cultivate valuable skills in visual literacy, critical thinking, written and oral communication, and teamwork.

Count of Department Fall 2013 - Spring 2024

Fun Fact: Since 2012, the Museum has hosted 1,100 class visits & 16,500 students

Integrated Class Visit Examples

Students study sculptures at Nathalie Miebach's The Weather Variations: Connecting Data, Sculpture, and Music exhibition

Multiple classes use Nathalie Miebach's The Weather Variations: Connecting Data, Sculpture, and Music exhibition

A collaboration between the Office of Sustainability and the Denison Museum, Nathalie Miebach’s exhibition brought together classes and conversations during a year-long series of activities. Classes in Biology, Communication, Data Analytics, English, ENVS, Geosciences, Journalism, Psychology/Neuroscience, and Studio Art engaged with Miebach’s exhibition. She visited Data Analytics classes in the fall and gave an artist talk during the TUTTI festival in March, accompanied by a musical performance by the string quartet ETHEL. In addition, students served as paid assistants to Miebach during her week-long spring artist’s residency, helping with the installation and deinstallation of the exhibition in the Denison Museum gallery.

Wall mural comprised of black snake-like lines intersecting around the room wrapping around a two-dimensional image of a car.

Global Health 350 uses Ryan! Feddersen, Black Snake Rising exhibition

Global Health students in Tom Henshaw’s “Planetary Health” course visited indigenous artist Ryan! Feddersen’s installation, Black Snake Rising, as part of their investigation of the impact of petroleum extraction. Students read case studies examining the history and use of petroleum, health issues surrounding oil drilling, and indigenous groups’ perspectives on the petroleum industry. They then explored Feddersen’s interactive depiction of a sea of black oil snakes flowing in a nest of petroleum products and the species most affected by oil spills. Finally, they presented a summary of their readings and discussed the tensions between petroleum as a driver of economic development and the adverse ecological and health outcomes associated with petroleum extraction.

Students examining pieces from the Museum's  Hispanic/ LatinX art collection

SPANISH 215 uses Museum's Hispanic/ LatinX art collection

During this week-long visit, intermediate Spanish students created exhibition labels as part of an assignment incorporating object analysis, historical research, and contextual analysis. Speaking and writing only in Spanish, students worked in small groups to select objects by Hispanic/ LatinX artists, making a formal presentation of their labels and research at the end of the week.

A camera crew filming interviews for Diné (Navajo) photographer Will Wilson’s portraits of Native Americans exhibition.

MUS 247 / In Conversation: Will Wilson

Students in Peter Graff’s “Music, Race, and Identity” course explored the exhibition of Diné (Navajo) photographer Will Wilson’s portraits of Native Americans alongside historical images from Edward Curtis’s early 19th century “The North American Indian” series. Students read critical theories and considered how artist and sitter jointly construct an image and what messages it conveys. Each student made a short presentation on a different contemporary Native American artist, followed by a discussion about representation of indigenous peoples in various forms of art.

Students sitting around a table analyzing Guna Indians' mola textiles.

ANSO 218/LACS 200 study Guna textile collection

Students in Shiri Noy’s “Sociology of International Development” course undertook a semester-long analysis of the Guna Indians’ mola textiles: the brightly colored, intricately patterned cloth produced by the women of the San Blas islands off the Atlantic coast of Panama. Through close-looking studies and analytical projects, students developed research skills and learned to construct meaning based on these objects, using the objects as data and evidence (not just as illustrations or examples.)

A group of students sit in a circle amid an exhibit at the museum.

BIOL 336 uses Museum collections

Students in Laura Romano’s Invertebrate Zoology course identified depictions of invertebrates in the Museum’s collection. They learned about cultural and aesthetic differences in representation, as well as how invertebrates are used as raw materials in the production of lacquer and cochineal dye. Students worked with the collections manager to learn how invertebrates affect artwork (e.g., infestations) and pest management techniques.

Students sitting at an art table create their own color wheels.

ARTS 101 uses Museum collections

Students in Keith Spencer’s Studio Art foundation course visited the Museum on several occasions as part of a unit covering color theory, the integration of direct observation, and learning about cultural objects. Each student selected an object from the collection and created a Joseph Albers paper color palette while working in front of their object in the Museum. Returning to the studio, they created their own color wheels mixed from acrylic paint. Finally, they presented their object, palette, and observations to their peers.

On this page

  • A teaching museum with a focus on helping faculty and students
  • Deepening student learning across the disciplines
    • A space to reflect and ask questions
    • Object-based learning
    • Count of Department Fall 2013 - Spr...
  • Integrated Class Visit Examples
    • Multiple classes use Nathalie Miebach's The Weather Variations: Connecting Data,...
    • Global Health 350 uses Ryan! Feddersen, Black Snake Rising exhibition
    • SPANISH 215 uses Museum's Hispanic/ LatinX art collection
    • MUS 247 / In Conversation: Will Wilson
    • ANSO 218/LACS 200 study Guna textile collection
    • BIOL 336 uses Museum collections
    • ARTS 101 uses Museum collections

More in Teaching & Learning

  • Forms, Policies, Publications

Spotlights

Artwork from the Aminah Robinson exhibit on display at the Denison Museum

Denison builds strong connection to artistry of Aminah Robinson

The artwork on display in the Denison Museum celebrates Robinson and honors the memory of professor Terrance Dean.
The Gordon Parks & Contemporaries exhibit

Denison Museum exhibit offers lessons on race, history, and trust

Gordon Parks & Contemporaries: Through the Lens promotes discussion across multiple disciplines and provides historical context for students.
Blue Grass Boys

The surprising history of Bluegrass music

Visiting professor Heather Grimm ’17 shares an intriguing history of Bluegrass music.
Cinema major Arman Meinecke '21 in the midst of creating a film

On the Way to LA

Cinema major Arman Meinecke '21 is a cinematic storyteller with great experiences that give him a leg up in the film industry.
Brittany Girl

Denison artwork connected to Van Gogh

Recent research on iconic painter Vincent Van Gogh has uncovered a link to a well-known work in the Denison Museum collection, Brittany Girl.
Daniel Roumain playing in concert with Titus Kaphar's A Disturbing Silence

Black Art 2020: Active interaction with Art

Two art exhibitions that focused on Black artists and their work became a springboard for learning in Prof. JSTN CLMN’s Black Art 2020 class.
Students interacting with the About Ourselves/Inside Ourselves exhibit
How We Learn

A Look Inside Ourselves

A Denison Museum art exhibit titled About Ourselves/Inside Ourselves explores queer history and identity.
Winslow Homer, The Boston Common
How We Learn

The American Dream

A student response to "Defining Childhood: Growing up in the US (1860-1940)."
exhibita
How We Learn

Feminist health politics

Students reflect on an exhibit, "Artifacts: Abortion Stories and Histories."
museum exhibit
How We Learn

Searching for the right question

A powerful museum exhibit was the impetus of a discussion on tragedy and more.
Rian Matthews
How We Learn

The Meaning of Context

Rian Matthews '16 critiques the work of an artist - and finds it lacking

What's Happening

Internships

2024-2025 Museum interns

Interns at the Denison Museum spend time with antiquities, art, and objects that enhance their learning and deepen their connection to their research.

Read more
University News

A campus icon returns to The Hill

Alexander Liberman’s Path is back to its home outside Burke Hall.

Read more
Exhibitions

Denison Museum welcomes ‘Mining the Qhapaq Ñan’

Professor Micaela de Vivero’s exhibit offers a unique perspective into the narrative and history of colonization in South America.

Read more
See All

100 West College Street
Granville, Ohio 43023
1-740-587-0810

Footer menu

  • Make a Payment
  • MyDenison
  • Title IX / Non-Discrimination
  • Library
  • Shop Denison
  • Make a Gift

Stay up to date with the latest campus news and upcoming events.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Youtube

Our Home:
Granville, OH »

  • Employment
  • Consumer Information
  • Forms & Policies
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Notice
  • Social Media Community Guidelines
  • Report a Bug
Back to top