This year, the MCN conference's closing plenary was a formal debate, featuring 
two teams of debaters considering topics of broad interest to the museum 
community. 

Our debate propositions and teams were:

1. Museums that are not run as businesses will ultimately fail. 
For the motion: Erin Coburn and Rob Stein; against the motion: Nancy Proctor 
and Bruce Wyman

2. Engagement with online visitors is as important as engagement with those on 
site. 
For the motion: Rob Stein and Len Steinbach; against the motion: Beck Tench and 
Bruce Wyman

The debates were hard fought, sharply argued, and lots of fun. For those of you 
who weren't able to be there, Rich Cherry's team at the Balboa Park Online 
Collaborative captured and edited the event. Thanks to Rich for arranging the 
videotaping, to Scott Granger for the video capture, and to Chris 
Borkowski--BPOC's newest staff member--for editing the footage. A four-minute 
digest of the event has been posted on the MCN website at: 
http://www.mcn.edu/great-debate

One of my favorite aspects of the debate was the participation of the audience. 
Audience members not only voted for the winners (the speakers who persuaded the 
most people to change their minds during the course of the debate*), but also 
asked really smart, thoughtful, and relevant questions during the event's 
cross-examination section. The digest version of the debate doesn't include the 
audience questions, but a full-length video, which will be posted shortly, 
does. 

Thanks to our debaters for their fearlessness, preparedness, and wit--and their 
willingness, in some cases, to debate a position that they didn't necessarily 
agree with! Thanks, too, to everyone who attended, added to the discussion with 
questions, and took place in the voting. 

*For the record, the winners of the debates were Erin and Rob, arguing the 
affirmative side of the proposition, "Museums that are not run as businesses 
will ultimately fail," and Beck and Bruce, arguing the negative side of the 
proposition, "Engagement with online visitors is as important as engagement 
with those on site."





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