|
Alum
Brings Big Ideas To Museum
When
he becomes Museum of Science President on Jan. 1, Ioannis Miaoulis
plans to leverage his Tufts experience and creativity.
Boston
[12-31-02] While the New Year brings a change of scenery
for newly appointed Museum of Science
President Ioannis Miaoulis, the Tufts graduate plans to continue
his legacy of “big ideas.” Creative thinking, says
Miaoulis, will be the key to the continued success of the popular
Boston landmark.
“I
want this to be a place where adults come to explore and understand
scientific concepts and participate in debates about technologies,”
Miaoulis told The Boston Herald, explaining his vision
for making the Museum attractive to a broader audience. “This
in an intellectual playground of great proportion. I want to make
it an exciting place for kids of all ages.”
To do that,
the former dean of Tufts’ School
of Engineering plans to call on one of his strengths –
creative, innovative thinking.
According
to the Herald, Miaoulis’ new ideas for the Museum
include “establishing a new fine dining restaurant at the
museum where diners can listen to talk about the mechanical engineering
of food preparation and creating a digital ‘backpack’
that lets students download exhibit elements for use on home computers.”
He also suggests
“designing new exhibits that link disciplines such as science
and art – for example, examining the science and engineering
concepts behind the construction and performance of musical instruments,
or the effect of heat and humidity on the performance of a Steinway
piano.”
Miaoulis
hopes the concepts help inspire investment in the Museum, which
serves more than 1.6 million visitors each year.
“Right
now we are gearing up for a growth spurt,” Miaoulis told
the Herald, referring to the institution’s upcoming
capital campaign. “We are gearing up to excite people to
make investments. We will be expanding in a virtual way, with
more interactive exhibits.”
At the heart
of those exhibits will be the Tufts graduate’s trademark
interest in exploring science from a host of unique perspectives.
“During
his 15-year tenure [as a Tufts professor and later dean of Tufts’
School of Engineering], he established a fluid mechanics course
from a fish’s point of view, exploring how aquatic animals
use fluid mechanics to propel and feed themselves, and build habitats,”
reported the Herald. “In a Gourmet Engineering
course, students studied the physics of heat transfer in a kitchen
– and ate the experiments.”
While fun
for students, Miaoulis’ experiments led to cutting-edge
discoveries.
“Miaoulis
earned a Presidential Young Investigator Award when he and his
students in a biology lab discovered that the thickness and layering
of the thin film on the scales of a butterfly’s wings maximized
the retention of solar heat,” reported the newspaper. “That
discovery helped scientists structure the wafer-thin layers of
silicon on computer chips to prevent the chips from melting during
the high-temperature production process.”
Miaoulis’
work is an example of the collaborative environment at Tufts,
which stresses that the solutions to society’s most complex
problems are likely to be found at the intersection of disciplines.
He plans to adopt a similar approach at the Museum of Science.
“I
like connecting things not obviously connected,” Miaoulis
told the Herald. “We create knowledge bubbles –
engineering, biology, physics, art, music. But nature is not created
that way. It’s a continuum. Things fall between the cracks.
Most discoveries are hidden in the crevices between fields.”
|