Developing History’s Leaders Since 1959
The History Leadership Institute is the best professional development opportunity for mid- and advanced-career professionals at history organizations of all types and sizes. Since 1959, HLI has helped history professionals develop the tools, ideas, and connections they need to enhance their ability to lead institutions and the field. Through an intensive, two-week seminar coupled with several virtual gatherings, HLI continues to evolve to meet the needs of the field’s current and future leaders.
Watch a free webinar about the History Leadership Institute.
Click here to learn about the topics and sessions from 2024.
History Leadership Institute Seminar
Meeting May through September—with a two-week, intensive, on-site experience in late June—a cohort of about 20 Fellows dives deep into a broad range of current and future national issues facing the history and museum field to help them lead with purpose, relevance, and impact. Through workshops, discussions, activities, and site visits facilitated by dozens of nationally-recognized experts, HLI Fellows tackle the most pressing challenges confronting history institutions and develop strategies for addressing them. Topics covered in the seminar include facilitating change, fostering effective teams, engaging with diverse audiences, and much more. HLI challenges history professionals to stop asking “Are we doing things right?” and to start asking “Are we doing the right things?”
Now accepting applications for the 2025 Seminar! Apply by January 15, 2025.
For 2025, the HLI Seminar will include a mix of virtual sessions and two weeks in residence in June at the Minnesota Historical Society in Minneapolis, Minnesota (hosted at the MNHS Mill City Museum). The Seminar is led by director Andrea Jones, who has more than 20 years of experience working in the museum and public history fields and is known for her creativity, advocacy for non-traditional learners, and her commitment to diversity and inclusion. The program is supported and guided by a diverse coalition of institutional partners, listed below, that are committed to excellence and professional development.
Details about the 2025 seminar can be found below. If you have additional questions, please contact John Marks.
- Dates: June 16–27, 2025. Shorter, mandatory virtual sessions will be held both before and after the program in June, July, August, and September.
- Location: Mill City Museum of the Minnesota Historical Society (Minneapolis, Minnesota) and online.
- Lodging: Fellows will be provided lodging in one bedroom/one bathroom hotel suites near our host site.
- Cost: $3,760 (members, including staff of institutional members); $4,015 (nonmembers). Fees include both tuition and lodging.
- Scholarships: Six full scholarships are available in 2025. See the Scholarships tab (on the left of this page) for more info.
- Applications for the 2025 Seminar are being accepted through January 15, 2025.
Applying to the Seminar
The History Leadership Seminar welcomes applications from staff in large and small history organizations who want to deepen their thinking about the vexing issues facing the history field and more effectively achieve their organization’s mission and impact.
Applicants usually work in a leadership position at their institution, such as director, department head, or project manager. Applicants should have several years of experience working as professionals in a non-profit organization focused on history, such as a museum, library, archives, historical society, historic site, or historic preservation organization. The Seminar is not designed for staff who are new to the field or students and faculty at academic institutions.
Applicants are expected to have a basic knowledge and experience with the standards and best practices of their profession so that they can actively participate and discuss issues affecting mid- and advanced-career history professionals. If admitted, Associates are expected to participate as colleagues in all Seminar activities, including discussions, small group activities, and site visits, to strengthen the cohort experience.
Applications for 2025 Seminar are being accepted through January 15, 2025.
Applications require the following materials:
- Personal statement, confirming you will participate in the Seminar if accepted; describing your background, experience, and current role; explaining how your participation will benefit you, your career, and/or your organization; and describing the potential impact of your participation on the Seminar experience, the cohort of Fellows, and your institution.
- Resumé or CV (three pages maximum).
- Letter of support from your institution’s director/CEO or board chair (if you are director); we may also accept a letter of recommendation from a professional colleague if necessary.
- Scholarship request (optional).
Scholarships
Applicants to the History Leadership Seminar can indicate their desire for consideration for several different scholarship opportunities. All scholarships cover the full program cost ($3,650 AASLH Members/$3,900 Nonmembers). Applicants who wish to be considered for the scholarships listed below will be asked to provide an additional letter outlining their eligibility as part of their application package. See Applying to HLI for more details.
Denny O’Toole Scholarship
This need-based scholarship is offered to at least one Associate each year. It is intended to facilitate the participation of a promising leader working at an institution who cannot otherwise fund their attendance in the program.
Diversity Scholarship
The HLI Diversity scholarship is offered to at least one applicant who represents a background or perspective that is underrepresented in the history field.
Cinnamon Catlin-Legutko Memorial Scholarship
In memory of Cinnamon and her generational impact on museums, historic sites, and public history, AASLH has created a special scholarship fund in her name to advance her legacy of transformational change across the museum community. Eligible applicants include those working in small museums, as either full-time or part-time paid or volunteer employees and who are institutional or individual members of AASLH; and Indigenous persons and those employed as staff members with a tribal organization, program, or collection.
Alumni Testimonials
Note: The alumni testimonials below may refer to the program under its previous name, “Seminar for Historical Administration,” or “SHA.”
Testimonials from members of the Class of 2024, submitted anonymously
“This is the kind of experience I’ve been waiting for my whole professional life. I needed this more than I can say…This was transformative. I will never forget this experience.”
“Participating in the HLI program has been a transformative experience that equipped me with essential leadership skills necessary for guiding my team effectively.”
“I left HLI filled with gratitude, inspiration, and fresh ideas.”
Testimonials from members of the Class of 2023, submitted anonymously
I think the most helpful thing about this workshop was getting to know our cohort and building a connection of peers to share our challenges, as well as our experiences. I also loved the focus on DEAI, and how it can look in museums was a timely topic for our cohort. Andrea tied all the sessions nicely together. She also recognized when our cohort needed moments for pause and reflection, which I found very useful. I appreciated her insight and all the planning that went into the four week program.
The workshop and its speakers gave me language towards things I was “feeling” about the museum field but didn’t know how to fully describe. I am going to be speaking at my institution in a series of learning lunches about what I learned from this experience, and I fully believe that the information shared will help to better our institution and any institution I may work with in the future. Andrea was an excellent facilitator and really humanized the program. She was respectful of our time and responded to how the group was feeling at all moments. The speakers she organized were all informed in their areas and awesome to listen to/speak with. She truly seemed invested in wanting to help us grow and really take what we learned and start to apply it. I truly valued her style of leadership with the program and think she created an environment where we could talk about all topics, good and bad.
Christopher Miller (Class of 2016), National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
My experience…reinforced my perspective on the value of public history. History is a weapon that empowers us to be courageous and inspires us to guard our collective hope for a greater future. Through this immersive experience with like-minded colleagues, I was able to understand my role as a steward of history’s authentic truth.
Chris Goodlett (Class of 2016), Kentucky Derby Museum
[This program] is the single most profound experience I have had in my professional career. Intellectually, it provided the necessary time to step outside of the everyday work schedule and reconnect with why I found history so essential in the first place. The faculty challenged us daily to think about the history profession in different ways. Additionally, the chance to share this experience with peers across the country is invaluable. Daily opportunities to discuss the myriad of issues in all our institutions, whether to stand in solidarity amidst common problems or help each other provide solutions, is possibly the primary benefit of SHA. Even after returning home, I find myself relying on members of my SHA class to offer necessary insight, something I’m quite certain I’ll do for the remainder of my career.Jennifer Niemi (Class of 2014) Minnesota Historical Society
The spring of 2014 I found myself at a professional crossroad. It felt like any minute I was going to be discovered as a fraud in my position as the program manager at Split Rock Lighthouse. I was questioning my every idea and decision. When I saw the all staff email looking for internal applicants for the 2014 cohort it felt like a sign. I would either apply and be found out for the sham I was or maybe someone would see something I was not. Much to my surprise I was chosen as one of two staff members given the go ahead to submit a formal application to the AASLH Seminar for Historic Administration (SHA). My time at SHA felt like a re-commitment to my job, the history field and myself. It reaffirmed that the work I was doing was relevant, alive and meaningful.
Aimee E. Newell (Class of 2013), Luzerne County Historical Society
Within the first hours of the SHA experience, I knew that it would be incredible, largely due to my classmates. Here was a group of people who shared my enthusiasm and passion! Like me, they wanted to make the field better, starting with their own institutions. For me personally, I loved the opportunity to learn and think about leadership and what it means for the history museum field. When I went home after the three weeks, I wanted more. Almost four years later, I am halfway through an MBA program (where I am learning more about leadership, entrepreneurship and finance) and five months into my first job as Executive Director. I am still in touch with many of my classmates, several of whom were instrumental in encouraging me take the leap to ED. They cheer on my successes and help me problem solve when I need it.
Jessica Ellison (Class of 2012), Minnesota Historical Society
Leaving my husband and three small kids for three weeks to attend SHA was not easy, but the best things in life rarely are. SHA provided a rare opportunity to be immersed in thoughtful, complicated discussions about relevant issues in my field; for a person who never takes a lunch break, it was miraculous! But perhaps the greatest benefit is your cohort of fellow history professionals, people you continue to connect with and learn from for years after SHA.
Ryan Spencer (Class of 2012), The Henry Ford
For me, SHA was the perfect professional experience at the perfect time in my career. I had finished grad school in Museum Studies four years prior. SHA helped me take the theoretical knowledge I gained from school and attach it to my experiences in the trenches, as it were. SHA also connected me with a much wider professional network than I had known before. Suddenly, my eyes weren’t fixed solely on growth at The Henry Ford, but growth within the larger field of Public History and Museums. Since SHA in 2012, I have blessed by three promotions and increased responsibility. I believe SHA helped prepare me for these new roles.
Jamie Glavic (Class of 2011), National Underground Railroad Freedom Center
SHA is more than professional development – it’s a career builder. From expanding my history network, to the friendships I share with my cohort, SHA has been pivotal in my professional growth and has presented me with opportunities I would have never thought possible. If you’re not sure what you next step is, or should be, apply for SHA. This program guided and helped me create my professional roadmap.
Rebecca M. Slaughter (Class of 2009), Las Cruces Museum System
I am incredibly grateful for time in Indy! I attended SHA at a moment of crisis in my career. I was struggling with the “where do I go from here” question. My classmates were brutally honest when I voiced my concerns and hopes for the future and I ended my three weeks a better museum professional with a new set of vibrant colleagues stretched across the country. I came home from my three weeks away with an infusion of hope and excitement about our work which still drives me today.
Richard Josey (Class of 2008), Collective Journeys, LLC.
One of the most transformative moments in my life was the moment when I attended the Seminar for Historical Administration. Leaving SHA was like leaving church on Sunday; I was filled with a renewed spirit, sense of purpose, and new thoughts to consider in my future work. Now, 9 years later, I’ve continued to build on those lessons and have been an advocate to send several of my colleagues. SHA Alumni are like a family that keeps growing year after year.
Michelle Moon (Class of 2007), Lower East Side Tenement Museum
In midcareer, it often seems a mystery how the leaders of the field got from where we are to where they are ‐ how they developed their scope of knowledge about administration, purpose, and the issues of public history. SHA demystifies this process concentrating years’ worth of mentorship into a rich, intensive three weeks. Nowhere else will the midcareer professional find the breadth and strong grounding in leadership basics in such an efficient package.
Contact Information
Use the information below to get in touch with any questions about the History Leadership Institute.
Director: Andrea Jones, Peak Experience Lab ([email protected])
Program Administrator: John Marks, Director, Research & Strategic Initiatives ([email protected])
Local Arrangements: TBD
Cancellation and Refund Policy
Cancellations for HLI online courses must be submitted in writing via email to [email protected] or mail to 2021 21st Ave S., Suite 320 Nashville, TN 37212. Cancellations made more than two weeks prior to the course start date will be subject to a $55 processing/materials charge. No refund will be given beginning two weeks from the start date of the online course. Registrants may transfer their registration to another person. Registrations cannot be transferred between courses or course sessions. AASLH is not responsible for cancellations that were mailed or emailed but never received.
Participants who have committed to attending the History Leadership Seminar will not be issued a refund if they choose to cancel.
Photo Release
History Leadership Seminar participants agree to the following: You authorize AASLH to use, reproduce, and/or publish photographs and/or video that may pertain to you — including your image, likeness, and/or voice without compensation. AASLH may use this material in various publications, recruitment materials, or for other related endeavors in print and online, including the AASLH website and email correspondence.