Looking ahead, the EMS Museum & Art Gallery’s stability will depend on the foundation that has shaped its strongest work: serving communities that value its collections, spaces, programs, and relationships. Sustainable growth does not mean simply doing more. It means becoming more deeply integrated into the teaching, research, outreach, and public-service missions of the College and University while remaining responsive to students, faculty, alumni, educators, visitors, donors, and partners across Pennsylvania.
This work aligns with Penn State’s land-grant mission and institutional values of integrity, respect, responsibility, discovery, excellence, and community. It also reflects EMS priorities around transformative learning, convergent research, infrastructure development, community building, and sustainability. For the Museum, these commitments point toward a future in which collections are preserved and accessible, exhibitions connect earth science, industrial history, sustainability, and the arts, and students gain practical experience with real objects, data, and audiences.
As the Museum develops its next strategic plan in FY2025-2026, five principles will guide this work:
Steward EMS collections for the long term. Preserve, document, house, and digitize collections so they remain usable for teaching, research, exhibition, and public engagement.
Treat museums and collections as academic infrastructure. Advocate for the spaces, staffing, and systems needed to support Penn State’s educational and research mission.
Expand education and outreach. Use collections to support curricula, student training, science communication, and public learning.
Meet communities where they are. Sustain exhibitions that connect EMS science, Pennsylvania’s earth industries, sustainability, and the arts in welcoming and relevant ways.
Build partnerships through service. Strengthen the Museum’s role as a trusted resource for the College, the University, and the Commonwealth.
In this way, the Museum’s future will be shaped not by growth for its own sake, but by service: to the objects and stories entrusted to us, to the students and researchers who learn from them, and to the communities that find meaning in what the Museum is and does.



The EMS Museum & Art Gallery continued to serve as one of the College’s most visible and flexible points of connection to the University and central Pennsylvania communities. It is a place where Penn State students practice science communication, faculty extend classroom learning, and community audiences encounter the earth and mineral sciences in ways that are immediate and hands-on. Education and outreach are often described in terms of numbers, but their larger significance lies in what they make possible. For the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, these activities turn collections, exhibits, and expertise into public-facing experiences that reflect the depth of EMS research and teaching. For the University, they support Penn State’s land-grant mission by creating opportunities for outreach, experiential learning, and interdisciplinary collaboration. For the community, they open the Museum as a place of access, where schoolchildren, families, alumni, and visitors can explore stories of science, history, and environment through direct engagement with objects and ideas.
