2006 Annual Report - The Franklin Institute
Transcription
2006 Annual Report - The Franklin Institute
2006 Annual Report transforming 2 5 11 17 22 24 34 Executive Message Science Museum Center for Innovation in Science Learning The Franklin Center Financial Report 2006 Contributed Support Board of Trustees Today’s Franklin Institute emerges renewed as the result of sustained planning, innovative programming, forward-looking, dedicated staff, and a committed Board of Trustees, all working in a disciplined approach toward the common goal of inspiring a passion for learning and discovery about science and technology. What the Institute had accomplished in the past several years — in exhibits, school partnerships, museum programs, community outreach, and liaisons with the scientific community — prepared it for the new ventures upon which it embarked in 2006 and foreshadows horizons for the future. destination mission identity exhibits events interaction play perceptions expectations interests thoughts lifestyles audiences demographics children teens adults seniors singles families tourists schools students teachers parents curricula activities knowledge minds leadership transforming awareness communications technologies the past the present the future appeal attendance popularity demand recognition growth excitement buzz momentum trends plans place stories theories demonstrations experiments shows movies achievements scientists participants readers researchers web surfers conduit focus content environment ambition horizon EXEC UTI VE ME S SAGE It is fitting that as Philadelphia and the nation celebrated the 300th anniversary of Benjamin Franklin’s birth in 2006, The Franklin Institute — named in his honor—celebrated one of the best years in its 182-year history. audiences. By the time Titanic, the Institute’s first blockbuster, It has been a transformational year in every way, changing public closed in January 2005, it had drawn 354,000 visitors. It was fol- perceptions of the Institute, broadening its scope of operations, lowed nine months later by Gunther von Hagens’ BodyWorlds: reaching out to new audiences, and again presenting a strong The Anatomical Exhibition of Real Human Bodies, which in turn financial position, with a balanced budget—the 11th in the past 12 attracted 603,000 visitors, the highest attendance of any museum years. It was a year distinguished not only by record attendance, exhibit ever presented in Philadelphia and the Commonwealth. but even more notably by the opening of the Science Leadership BodyWorlds broadened the Franklin’s audience in terms of age, Academy, a new magnet high school operated in partnership with gender, race and ethnicity, with more than 30 percent of its the School District of Philadelphia. 2006 also saw unprecedented audience coming in the evening. While BodyWorlds appealed utilization of the redesigned and expanded website, which served to adults and families, the stunningly beautiful but smaller over 351 million files to more than 19.3 million individuals, making it the most visited website of any science center in the world. DARWIN exhibition—with a strong Darwin experiential pack- Looking forward, insuring the Institute’s future, on October 10, age that included an auditorium show with live animals—drew 2006 the Board of Trustees approved a new strategic plan for 2006– more high school classes during its three-month fall showing 2012 which will include a building expansion, as well as a major than any previous special exhibit. new exhibition on the brain. And, as a further prelude of things to These special exhibits clearly boost the Institute’s attendance come, before Christmas the Institute had sold over 300,000 tick- numbers. They provide essential financial stability that in turn ets for Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs, which enables the Institute to offer a variety of special experiences would open February 3, 2007 in the Mandell Center. aimed at introducing its greater community to the challenging Such diverse milestones were possible in large measure world of scientific discovery. Community Night evening events, because of the Institute’s disciplined approach to planning that the third Wednesday of each month, encouraged visits by included a vision supported by a succession of well-conceived African American and Latin communities, providing opportuni- and successfully implemented strategic plans, each anticipat- ties to extend the reach of the Institute. Grants from a variety of ing future needs, opportunities and challenges. While in rare donors brought thousands of at-risk area schoolchildren to the instances timelines were altered so that the Institute could take Institute and to its special exhibits. Full-day experiential pack- advantage of special unforeseen opportunities, such as the avail- ages for school groups immersed students in a day of activities ability of the DARWIN exhibit, it met virtually every benchmark directed at broadening knowledge in a specific curriculum-cor- and exceeded the goals of “Turning the Key” and “A Vision for the related area of scientific discipline. Future.” The recently completed $61.7 million capital campaign, a key component of these strategic plans, funded the renovation of galleries for traveling exhibitions large and small, so that the Institute can now easily accommodate one or two special exhib- its at the same time, thus addressing the interests of different 2 Dennis M. Wint President & CEO Marsha R. Perelman Chair who visited the Institute with their schools received discounted The Role of Partnering admission, unrestricted funds underwrote free visits for 32,859 Partnering with other organizations has been an important means school children from underserved communities, as well as of enhancing and expanding science education. The longest helped support the PACTS program. standing partnership is with the School District of Philadelphia, The year’s robust attendance, the birth of the Science and programs have ranged from onsite museum lessons, to pro- Leadership Academy, the expansion of education programs and fessional development for teachers, to science kits for elementary greater visibility of The Franklin Institute Awards Program are all schools, to getting parents involved in science learning. By far the most ambitious program, however, has been the opening of indicative of the Institute’s new vitality and direction. Its exhibi- vative public high school opened with a freshman class of 112, and minorities — now serve as program and business models faculty that could have had its pick of jobs. Located two blocks tutional successes, further strengthened by the new Strategic like Franklin, entrepreneurship. The Franklin Institute is an inte- initiatives. the Science Leadership Academy. In September 2006 this inno- tions and educational outreach programs — especially for girls selected from 900 applicants, a creative principal and a gifted for non-profit organizations nationwide. These and other insti- from the Institute, the school focuses on science, technology and, Plan 2006–2012, have uniquely prepared the Institute for future The Franklin Institute is today experiencing recognition gral part of their city campus. Partnerships within the Institute’s walls proved invaluable and rediscovery, contributing to the growth of the educational ters of operation—the Science Museum, Center for Innovation in on years of hard-won good will and community service, the of expertise, given their very different orientations. Increasingly time and resources from its Board, from its staff, and from its classroom, expanding website applications and bringing histor- as an internationally recognized center of innovative education in executing internal programs. The Institute’s three main cen- and cultural life of the Greater Philadelphia area. Capitalizing Science Learning, and Franklin Center—each have unique areas Institute has been the recipient of the commitment of increased they collaborate in developing curriculum materials for the many volunteers and supporters in an effort to cement its place ical collections to light. and scientific discovery. The Institute’s many successes enabled it to finish the year with an operating surplus. Earned revenue from many diverse revenue sources, such as admissions, Sci-Store, and facility rent- In Memoriam: The Institute owes thanks to its leaders past and results which, in 2006, reached approximately $24 million. The L. Andes (1930-2006), whose vision and leadership resulted in con- program support. Additionally, through outright gifts and pro- (1919-2006), a former board member and a generous, enthusiastic als, constituted the largest percentage of the annual operating present, and regrets the passing of its Chairman Emeritus Charles Institute raised more than $5.8 million in gifts earmarked for struction of a new wing to the Institute, and Stanley Tuttleman ceeds from Franklin Family Funfest and The Franklin Institute supporter for many years. Awards Dinner, donors contributed a record $ 3.1 million in unrestricted operating support. Although all of the 247,747 students 3 evolving 4 TH E SC I E NC E MU S E UM To the outside world, 2006 may have been the year of BodyWorlds, but inside The Franklin Institute Science Museum, it was a year of strengthening ties to its existing community and expanding connections to heretofore underserved audiences — all driven by significant innovation in programming. 5 Above: BodyWorlds: The Anatomical Exhibition of Real Human Bodies, seen by 603,000 people, attracted a broad cross-section of visitors to a magnificently prepared and presented lesson in human anatomy. Right: Children were fascinated by colorful live iguanas in DARWIN, in the Mandell Center. Adult audiences purchased 30 percent of the total BodyWorlds tickets in evening visits, and the Museum was heavily populated with adults seven nights a week. They came back for Darwin panel discussions and lectures, movie premieres and special astronomy programs throughout the year. Community Nights attracted 11,000 largely African American and Latin Philadelphians to a series of themed programs on the third Wednesday of each month. The further development of Experiential Packages for school groups led to radically increased attendance by high schools, particularly for BodyWorlds and DARWIN. Young adult “date-night” audiences flocked to the Friday night summer Animation Film Festival; each theater presentation was followed by a Planetarium after party, often featuring live music. Adult tour groups, not a traditional audi- its almost seven-month run on April 23 with total attendance of ence, began visiting for Titanic and BodyWorlds, and as 2006 drew 603,000, the Institute followed up with the smaller, more play- to a close, adult groups had booked 55,000 advance reservations ful interactive summer exhibit, Animation. A partnership with for Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs. All of this Apple Computer enabled the Institute to offer a complete Apple increased and diversified programming was supported by devel- Animation Studio with ten state-of-the-art animation worksta- opment of three new live shows and six updated or new hands-on tions for weekend visitors from Memorial Day to Labor Day. The workshops, as well as the presentation of a new Fels Planetarium show and six IMAX premieres. Institute’s demonstrated ability to present and augment a vari- provided variety to the Museum experience for new and tradi- DARWIN and Animal Grossology, in upper and lower Mandell, ety of appealing exhibits was applied equally well in hosting In the Mandell Center traveling exhibits, large and small, respectively, for the fall and early winter months. tional audiences alike. In contrast to BodyWorlds, which ended 6 The Fels Planetarium, originally opened in 1934, has been introducing generations of visitors to the constellations we see in the night skies, as well as to the latest discoveries about planets and distant galaxies. Programming Experiential Package programs for schools, first introduced in fall 2005, included in 2006: the BodyWorlds Experience, Giant Heart Experience, Darwin Experience and Galactic Adventure Experience. Developed at the suggestion of the Institute’s teacher advisory group, these full day experiences focus students on a single topic, integrating an exhibit with lab and live show sessions that relate closely to classroom curricula. The surcharge for these packages has not deterred enrollment. Public programs spurred visits, added both substance and fun, and — particularly during Heart Health Month — provided a valuable public service. Some programs were related to traveling exhibits, while others built on areas of institutional strength like Wellness, Astronomy, Science of Sports and Weather. BodyWorlds Top: In The Sports Challenge pitching cage visitors can check the velocity of their pitch. ness platform and Heart Health Month in February. Expert panel Below: In The Giant Heart exhibit visitors in the foreground get to compare the hearts of animals ranging from birds to elephants. and the Giant Heart provided the perfect backdrop for the well- discussions with health professionals focused on healthy living for members of the African American and Latin communities. For sports, annual Spring Training Day in March and Race Car Day in July were followed in the fall by a panel discussion con- and four smaller Meade refractor telescopes were installed, nected to the DARWIN exhibit on the “Evolution of the Racehorse: along with a computerized control system. The Barbaro Story.” That panel program was seen by over a thou- Long-standing museum programs remained fully subscribed. sand more individuals via the Institute’s added capability of The Traveling Science Show program, the premier program of Skies events culminated in World Space Week in October, with schools from Connecticut to Washington, D.C. More than 500 chil- podcasting on its website. For astronomy, a series of September its kind on the East Coast, was seen by 250,000 students in 980 a special presentation by Cornell Professor Steve Squyres, the dren attended each of six sessions of summer Discovery Camp, principal investigator for NASA’s Mars Exploration Program and and another 244 attended from one to five days of the shorter author of Roving Mars (also an IMAX film). Dr. Squyres also took Spring Break Camp. The popular overnight Spy Camp welcomed part in opening ceremonies for the refurbished Joel N. Bloom Observatory. The huge Zeiss reflector telescope was overhauled, 7 Below: Hands-on workshops, such as this one focusing on the heart, are part of single topic experiential packages developed for school group field trips. Above: There is something about seeing a full-size aircraft like the Air Force T-33 inside a building that amazes visitors of varying ages. 9,854 youngsters and chaperones, pillows and sleeping bags in tow, for a special overnight science adventure in the Museum. This signature program is especially popular with scout troops; some elementary schools use it as an opportunity for students and teachers to bond in an off-campus setting. Marketing and Technology for the 21st Century The Internet and e-mail communication have become integral in stimulating interactivity with the Institute’s many constit- For museums of the 21st century, communicating with members uencies. In fall 2006 the Institute launched a newly designed and potential visitors requires both marketing sophistication and and technologically enhanced website, making it possible for the creative use of technology as museums compete for precious visitors to more easily and immediately access event informa- leisure time given the hectic demands of family life in America. In tion, buy tickets, download podcasts of panel discussions like 2006, as it had done on a lesser scale for BodyWorlds, the Institute “The Evolution of the Race Horse,” identify summer programs brokered partnerships with tourism and marketing organiza- for children and preview clips from the latest IMAX features, as tions, most notably, the Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing well as to explore the extensive educational resource materials Corporation and the Philadelphia Convention and Visitors Bureau. for which www.fi.edu is famous. Reaching out, e-mail “blasts” Still other partnerships were established with major hotels, tele- promote on- and offsite programs to educators, members and vision and radio stations, transportation companies, corporate community groups. partners and fellow cultural institutions in order to create a platform of support for the much anticipated King Tut. Getting Ready for King Tut and 2007 The “buzz” about King Tut had started in January 2005, when news of the boy king’s impending arrival reached the media. No sooner had BodyWorlds closed (at 1 a.m. on April 24) than planning and long lead advertising for Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs began in earnest. Group tickets went on sale in the late spring of 2006. In late October, media sponsor 6ABC sent a reporter and crew to Egypt to produce a series of live and taped programs on ancient and contemporary Egypt, which aired during the station’s late news, 8 Middle and high school field trips increased dramatically as live science shows and science labs that were designed to meet upper grade school curriculum requirements. just prior to November 8, when individual tickets went on sale. Governor Ed Rendell, began in Manhattan in December with online to get vouchers to reserve tickets. rolling out to Boston, Pittsburgh, Washington, D.C. and Toronto. By then, some 200,000 individuals from all 50 states had gone taxicab signs and multi-story banners on Penn Station, before Tut made a regal splash on the King Tutankhamun float in By year’s end, with more than 300,000 tickets sold, including an the Boscov’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, complete with a dance incredible 123,000 to school groups, Philadelphia’s Year of Egypt troupe and musicians, broadcast live on 6ABC. Out-of-market had begun. advertising, supported by a textured partnership with the Greater Philadelphia Tourism Marketing Corporation and a mil- lion dollar grant from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and With attendance for 2006 reaching 1,055,299, foot traffic in the Museum was heavy. The addition of portable ticketing kiosks and new directional signage facilitated moving visitors through ticketing and on to exhibits and theaters. 9 nurturing 10 TH E C ENTER FOR I N N OVATI ON I N S C I E NC E L EA R N I NG In 2006 the Center for Innovation in Science Learning celebrated 11 years of science learning research and program development in Philadelphia, throughout the United States, and around the globe, where some 19.3 million individuals from nearly 200 countries visited The Franklin Institute Online. While the Center for Innovation has grown, broadening its impact geographically and especially academically, the real transformation has been in the students, parents and teachers who experienced the transformative power of science learning in each of the center’s program areas: teacher development, educational technology, gender and family learning, and youth leadership. 11 What better way to do a ribbon cutting for the Science Leadership Academy on September 29, 2006 than with a science experiment. At the left, Institute President Dennis Wint and Principal Chris Lehmann start the chain reaction as Institute Board Chair Marsha Perelman looks on. Members of the freshman class at the Science Leadership Academy work in one of the school’s well-equipped laboratories. Photo: Abdul R. Sulayman/ The Philadelphia Tribune. Youth Leadership and the Science Leadership Academy In September 2006 the Science Leadership Academy [SLA], a small, progressive magnet high school that partners the Institute and the School District of Philadelphia, opened its doors to an inaugural class of 112 freshman students. SLA offers a rigorous college-preparatory curriculum with a focus on science, technology and entrepreneurship. Students learn in a project-based environment where the core values of inquiry, research, collaboration, presentation and reflection are embodied in all classes. Located within easy walking distance, SLA students come to the Institute each week for “Wednesdays@The Franklin,” a two-hour program that immerses students in the exhibits, programs, and rich resources in the history of science housed at the Museum. This program also draws on their perspective as young adults in developing innovative approaches to their museum experiences. Both the philosophy and museum experiences of SLA mirror the Institute and the Center for Innovation’s established youth leadership program, Partnerships for Achieving Careers in Technology and Science (PACTS). Now in its 14th year, PACTS has demonstrated the transformative power for young people of real-world job experience, high expectations and positive peer pressure. PACTS Explainers work in departments and programs throughout the Museum and engage in substantive projects or services that develop their talents and pre-professional abilities. A growing number of SLA students have joined PACTS and promise to add a new dimension to youth leadership at The Franklin Institute. 12 Adults as Science Advocates Adults—whether parents, Girl Scout leaders or teachers—can be powerful advocates for children’s science learning. Since its inception, the Center for Innovation has promoted the transformation of science-shy or science-averse adults into science advocates and facilitators. In 2006 the Center for Innovation prepared four updated resources for Girl Scout leaders that support them as they facilitate science badge learning in meteorology, space exploration and other essential topics in physical and chemical science with girls 6-11. This effort grew out of The National Science Partnership [NSP] for Girl Scouts and Science Museums, originally funded by the National Science Foundation [NSF] in 1988, and now active in As a magnet school, Science Leadership Academy attracted students from 58 middle schools—public, private, parochial, charter and suburban. They represent some of the best and the brightest, with unusual vision about their futures. Photo: Abdul R. Sulayman/The Philadelphia Tribune 60 Girl Scout councils in 26 states. Another long-term project, Parent Partners in School Science [PPSS], also funded by NSF, moved toward conclusion as a model for building bridges between parents and teachers in three Philadelphia elementary schools. In 2006 PPSS Exploration Cards were fully adopted by the three schools. These curriculum- based science activities, sent home by teachers, gave parents and children the opportunity to explore science together at home. As one parent remarked, “We learned that science is all around us and is involved in our daily lives.” PACTS students, family and friends worked on an environmental mural located on the Institute’s ground floor. 13 The Institute’s Wright Aeronautical Engineering Collection includes this original lift/drag balance, an integral part of the wind tunnel built by the Wright brothers to study airflow over various shapes to insure consistent balance of lift and drag when they built full-size aircraft. A Unique History of Science, Transformed by Technology The Center for Innovation is a pioneer in the digital presentation of The Franklin Institute’s important historical artifacts and documents, with a portfolio that includes the Wright Aeronautical Albert Einstein, seen on the campus of Princeton University, received the Institute’s Franklin Medal in physics in 1935. The roster of past award recipients (available at www.fi.edu) reads like Who’s Who in Science. Engineering Collection (www.fi.edu/wright) and “Pieces of Science,” an online gallery of three-dimensional artifacts from the Institute’s holdings, including Ben Franklin’s lightning rod (www. fi.edu/pieces). The Institute also holds a unique history of science in its Case Files, the documentary record of the awards given by the Institute since 1824 for the greatest achievements in science, engineering and technology (www.fi.edu/case_files). In 2006 the Center for Innovation developed 16 online presen- tations of these unique primary resources that can be used by scholars, K-12 teachers and students, and the worldwide online public. In keeping with the Franklin Tercentenary, the topics for presentation were Energy and Communication and featured such Franklin Institute award laureates as Nikola Tesla (1894), Marie Curie (1909), Alexander Graham Bell (1912), and Thomas Edison (1915). During The Franklin Institute Awards Week, these resources were presented at a symposium entitled “The Unknown History of Science at The Franklin Institute,” which was filmed for presentation by ResearchChannel, a global non- profit media and technology organization, which is available to more than 22 million households. 14 Professional development for educators is one of many Institute contributions to the community. Workshops and coaching to develop skills in inquiry-based learning take place at the Institute and through joint classroom programs with selected elementary schools. Teachers as Learners The Center for Innovation engages teachers as active learners. Teachers participating in professional development raise questions, investigate phenomena, interpret findings, use technology, consider real world connections, and reflect on their learning process. When they return to the classroom, teachers draw on their experiences as inquiry learners to enable active science learning for their students. In 2006, through a collaboration with the School District of Philadelphia in the Math Science Partnership, the Center for Innovation provided summer and school-year coursework and curriculum-based online resources for teachers of grades 4–8. School-year mini-courses included topics such as Astronomy, Variables, Structures of Life, Ecosystems, Environments, and Magnetism and Electricity. Teachers showed gains in their content knowledge, and many commented in their post-course evaluations on the transformation of their teaching skills through their professional development experience. “Inquiry and investigation should be the key focus of each lesson,” wrote one teacher. “Students need to experience why and how it relates to them in their own world.” Another wrote, “I now ‘own my own learning.’ I not only have new strategies, but I also gained more content knowledge to share with my kids.” To teach inquiry-based learning, teachers must first experience it. In Franklin Institute educator workshops such as this one, teachers become the students. Many teachers return over the years to take workshops or summer institutes in a variety of topics. 15 inspiring 16 TH E FR A N KL I N C E NTE R As the overseer of the Institute’s collections, The Journal of The Franklin Institute and the Institute’s internationally recognized awards program, the Franklin Center is custodian to the past, present and future of science. Its collections preserve and provide historical context for artifacts from a 1911 Wright Flyer to hand-written case studies from the 19th century, while The Franklin Institute Awards Program recognizes outstanding achievements in modern science and technology — many of which have spawned important new disciplines such as nanotechnology and proteomics that will enable important future advances. 17 Earth and environmental science award laureate M. Gordon Wolman from The Johns Hopkins University talks to visitors about resource management and how what we do influences how our landscape evolves. The Benjamin Franklin Tercentenary 2006 was the culmination of an extensive initiative to coordinate the celebration of the 300th anniversary of Franklin’s birth, an effort begun by The Franklin Institute in 1999 when Institute President Dennis M. Wint invited The Library Company of Philadelphia, American Philosophical Society, University of Pennsylvania and Philadelphia Museum of Art to join forces to plan B. Franklin 300, a celebration that would include an international traveling exhibition drawing on collections of Frankliniana from around the world. Work accelerated after President George W. Bush signed legislation in 2002 establishing the 15-member United States Benjamin Franklin Tercentenary Commission, which appointed as its co-chairs The Honorable Arlen Specter and Meet the Scientist, a panel discussion with the 2006 award laureates that was hosted by PACTS, afforded an auditorium full of invited high school students an opportunity to meet and ask questions of this battery of world-class scientists. Institute President Wint. Franklin was feted widely throughout 2006. The exhibition Benjamin Franklin: In Search of a Better World, which includes 23 artifacts from the Institute’s collection—among them Franklin’s an official coin exchange with the French Ambassador to the glass armonica, sword and lightning rod—premiered at United States Jean-David Levitte, ceremonially recognizing the Philadelphia’s National Constitution Center. Subsequent venues enduring French/Colonial alliance negotiated by Franklin. In include the Missouri Historical Society, The Houston Museum of March, President and Mrs. Bush continued the celebration with Natural Science, the Denver Museum of Nature and Science, and a White House dinner attended by Dr. Wint and The Honorable Atlanta History Center, and a final showing at Musée des Arts et James Gerlach. Métiers and Musée Carnavalet in Paris in December 2007. The Tercentenary celebration took center stage at the Institute Recognizing Excellence with an Eye on the Future on January 17, the exact 300th anniversary of Franklin’s birth, Each year , through its Awards Program, the Institute draws world- when more than 300 invited guests, public servants, and sev- class leaders in their respective fields of science and technology to eral direct descendants of Franklin gathered in the Benjamin Philadelphia for a week of special activities. Franklin National Memorial for a special ceremonial dinner. Making these scientists accessible is one of the Institute’s The United States Benjamin Franklin Tercentenary Commission, unique contributions to inspiring the next generation of great represented by The Honorable Michael Castle, participated in 18 Back row: Trustee Gary J. Anderson, Institute Vice President Philip W. Hammer, Giacinto Scoles, J. Peter Toennies, R.E. (Ted) Turner, Narain G. Hingorani, Fernando Nottebohm, Institute Chair Marsha R. Perelman, Institute President Dennis M. Wint. Seated: Samuel J. Danishefsky, Estella B. Leopold (accepting for the late Luna B. Leopold), M. Gordon Wolman, Ray W. Clough, and Donald A. Norman. 2006 Fr an kli n I nstitute Awar ds 2006 Bower Award and Prize for Achievement in Science Narain G. Hingorani, Ph.D.,D.Sc. Independent Consultant Los Altos Hills, California Conceptualization and pioneering advancement of the Flexible AC Transmission System (FACTS) and Custom Power in electric power systems, and for outstanding technical contributions in High Voltage Direct Current Technology, which have enhanced the quality and security of the electric power system. 2006 Bower Award for Business Leadership R. E. (Ted) Turner Philanthropist and Media Entrepreneur Visionary leadership in the worlds of business and media, as well as his philanthropic commitment to the health of our planet and the well-being of its people. 2006 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Chemistry Samuel J. Danishefsky, Ph.D. Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and Columbia University Achievements in synthetic organic chemistry, particularly for the development of methods for preparing complex substances found in nature, and their emerging applications in the field of cancer treatment. 2006 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Civil Engineering Ray W. Clough, Sc.D. University of California, Berkeley Revolutionizing engineering and scientific computation, and engineering design methods through his formulation and development of the finite element method, and leadership in applying the method to earthquake engineering — especially the seismic performance of dams. 2006 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Computer & Cognitive Science Donald A. Norman, Ph.D. Northwestern University and Nielsen Norman Group Development of the field of user-centered design, which utilizes our understanding of how people think to develop technologies designed to be easily usable. 2006 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Earth & Environmental Science Luna B. Leopold, Ph.D. University of California, Berkeley M. Gordon Wolman, Ph.D. The Johns Hopkins University Advancing our understanding of how natural and human activities influence landscapes, especially the first comprehensive explanation of why rivers have different forms and how floodplains develop. Their contributions form the basis of modern water resource management and environmental assessment. 19 2006 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Life Science Fernando Nottebohm, Ph.D. The Rockefeller University Discovery of neuronal replacement in the adult vertebrate brain, explaining the mechanism and choreography of this phenomenon, and showing that neuronal stem cells are the responsible agents, thereby generating a completely new approach to the quest for cures for brain injury and degenerative disease. 2006 Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics Giacinto Scoles, FRS Princeton University and the International School for Advanced Studies J. Peter Toennies, Ph.D. Max Planck Institute and the University of Göttingen Development of new techniques for studying molecules, including unstable species, by embedding them in extremely small and ultracold droplets of helium and thus leading a better understanding of the extraordinary properties of superfluid helium, such as its ability to flow without friction. The Awards symposia sessions concluded with a moderated panel discussion on “Reducing the Threat of Nuclear Terrorism—Policy Options at the Intersection of Politics and Science” with Bower Business Award Laureate Ted Turner. Joining Mr. Turner (far left) were Former House Representative Curt Weldon (then a member of the House Armed Services, Homeland Security and Science committees); Joseph Cirincione, then of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace; and Dr. Frank von Hippel from Princeton University. Not pictured: moderator and NPR Science Correspondent David Kestenbaum. Curatorial Programs thinkers. To that end, the laureates make an indelible impres- sion on the many young people they meet either through Meet The Institute’s collections include artifacts smaller than a bread- or symposia at the University of Pennsylvania, Drexel University, everything from technical drawings for the original Philadelphia the Scientists, the public Laureates’ Laboratory in the Museum, box and as large as a Wright brothers biplane. They include the University of Delaware and Villanova University, where Waterworks, to a collection of antique musical instruments, to internationally distinguished laureates share with others their “prehistoric” calculators/computers. The care and documenting discoveries, experiences and views. of these collections is under the purview of the curatorial depart- The 2006 laureates illustrate the diversity of talent necessary ment. Its staff, interns and volunteers undertook a variety of to take science from the most basic theoretical level to the mar- projects in 2006, including integrating artifacts into current exhib- tiniest molecules to methods for analyzing some of the world’s human motion studies by pioneering photographer Eadweard shapes the natural landscape to how people can better design saw vintage tabletop optical devices. electricity that powers civilization to a voice that propels us to collection is electronically documented in full, it will become reates have received 109 Nobel Prizes. software in hand, staff transferred a considerable amount of ketplace. Their work ranges from techniques for studying the its so that visitors to BodyWorlds saw the once controversial nude largest man-made structures; from the study of how nature Muybridge, and summer visitors to the Apple Animation Studio the modern world; and from providing humankind with the Technology has become the curatorial tool, and once the a resource for scholars and laymen alike. With new database succeed and rise up to better our planet. To date 107 Franklin lau- information from an older system and expanded the digitized Awards Week culminates in the annual Awards Dinner archive. They proudly introduced the Curatorial Collection and Ceremony, emceed in 2006 by Walter Isaacson, author of Online, a working example of the collections database that will Benjamin Franklin: An American Life, and president and CEO eventually be available to the public. Working with the Center of The Aspen Institute. 781 guests attended the dinner, chaired for Innovation in Science Learning, staff expanded the selection by Ann Calvert and Daniel Fitzpatrick, and supported by the of Case Files from the Awards Program that are currently avail- Corporate and Friends Committees. The Institute was honored able on the Institute’s website. that ten past laureates, members of the Society of Laureates, The curatorial department also concentrated its efforts on attended the dinner. Bower Science Award Laureate Paul Baran preparing Institute collections for the upcoming American (2001) graciously hosted a Society of Laureates dinner in Menlo Association of Museums’ [AAM] accreditation process, which Park, California in November 2006. commences this year. 20 There are 4,047 institutions worldwide that have online access to the Journal from which there were 52,024 electronic accesses. In addition, there were 64,571 full text article downloads in 2006. This broad reach is the consequence of consortia agreements and institutional subscriptions to large journal col- lections published by the Institute’s publishing partner, Elsevier. Looking forward, a special issue on “Computational Security on the World Wide Web” is planned, an outgrowth of an interna- tional workshop on the topic held in Arica, Chile in July 2006. The entire archive of journals dating back to 1826 has been available online since 2003. The Library The Franklin Institute Library serves staff and volunteers and fields inquiries from students, teachers, the media, authors and researchers from around the world. To provide this service, the Library staff depends on a collection of more than 30,000 monographs and journal titles from the 17th through the 21st century, along with a contemporary collection of more ephemeral material and an audio-visual collection. Among the Library’s prized possessions are the manuscript day book of Benjamin Franklin’s son-in-law, Richard Bache, and an 1841 publication of photographs of Philadelphia area plants, possibly the earliest bound book of photographs produced in America. The Library is a valuable resource for information about Benjamin Franklin. As such, Library staff members served as consulting editors to Chelsea House Publishers for its 2006 pub- Early issues of The Journal of The Franklin Institute, first published in 1826, provide fascinating information about both science and local industry. The Baldwin Locomotive Works, whose advertisement appears at the top, is the same company that donated the Institute’s iconic steam locomotive — the 60,000. lication of Benjamin Franklin: Scientist, Inventor, Printer and Statesman. In 2006 the Library staff completed its seven-year effort to create a more tightly focused collection. Guided by the revised Collection Development Policy (2003), the Board of Trustees approved the deaccessioning of material no longer pertinent to the Library’s focus. Appropriate portions were offered initially The Journal of The Franklin Institute to local institutions for purchase or as donations. They acquired Technology has revolutionized the The Journal of The Franklin 47% of the pre-1900 items, 30% of the post-1900 monographs, Institute, the second oldest journal of science and technology to be and 2% of the journal collection, thus keeping locally important in continuous publication in the United States. Started in 1826, the materials in the Delaware Valley. The remaining materials were Journal is today a modern online publication, well respected for its sold at auction and to specialized dealers. scholarly papers on engineering and applied mathematics, especially information and communication systems, signal processing, wavelets, sensor fusion, computer and communication networks, neural networks, control theory, non-linear dynamics, fractals and chaos theory. 21 F I N ANC I AL R EPORT Statement of Operations and Changes in Net Assets Year Ended December 31, 2006 with Summarized Information for 2005 2006 Unrestricted Temporarily Restricted Revenue, support, and investment income Program revenue Admissions fees Ancillary activities Museum projects Educational programs and services Other Total program revenue $ 10,014,853 4,045,796 2,037,937 1,900,485 223,847 18,222,918 $ Support Annual giving In-kind contributions Government appropriations and grants Contributions – Capital campaigns Bequests and other contributions Total support 3,374,201 198,235 796,618 — 1,753,762 6,122,816 Investment return designated for current operations 1,349,271 3,043,991 28,738,996 Expenses Program expenses Museum operations Ancillary activities Museum projects Educational programs and services Total program expenses Interest Development – Capital campaign General development Total expenses Net assets released from restrictions Satisfaction of purpose restrictions Total revenue, support, operating investment income, and net assets released from restrictions Operating income before depreciation Depreciation and amortization Operating income (loss) Non-operating income, expenses and releases Net assets released from restrictions – Satisfaction of purpose restrictions Investment return net of amounts designated for current operations Loss on debt refinancing Unrealized gain (loss) on Interest Rate Swap Net appreciation of investments held by third parties Total non-operating income, expenses and releases — — — 200,000 — 200,000 Permanently Restricted Total 2005 $ — — — — — — $ 10,014,853 4,045,796 2,037,937 2,100,485 223,847 18,422,918 $ 8,383,566 3,596,214 3,652,496 1,927,852 66,221 17,626,349 — — 4,569,060 3,401,436 62,159 8,032,655 — — — — — — 3,374,201 198,235 5,365,678 3,401,436 1,815,921 14,155,471 3,280,707 430,584 713,412 2,564,302 328,200 7,317,205 — — 1,349,271 1,036,855 (3,043,991) — — — 5,188,664 — 33,927,660 25,980,409 17,499,027 1,937,223 2,694,462 1,752,200 23,882,912 — — — — — — — — — — 17,499,027 1,937,223 2,694,462 1,752,200 23,882,912 14,644,108 1,614,961 2,703,658 1,425,967 20,388,694 683,973 298,142 1,036,382 25,901,409 — — — — — — — — 683,973 298,142 1,036,382 25,901,409 926,103 310,385 898,262 22,523,444 2,837,587 5,188,664 — 8,026,251 3,456,965 5,192,452 (2,354,865) — 5,188,664 — — 5,192,452 2,833,799 4,996,745 (1,539,780) 4,124,597 (4,124,597) — — — 1,090,667 (817,567) (311,053) 2,382,875 — — — — — 3,473,542 (817,567) (311,053) 1,177,783 — 68,605 — 929,926 929,926 250,524 929,926 3,274,848 1,496,912 6,108,647 — 4,086,644 Increase (decrease) in net assets 1,731,779 3,446,942 929,926 Net assets Beginning of year End of year $ $ 29,112,075 32,559,017 $ 14,273,411 15,203,337 65,745,251 67,477,030 22 (1,741,722) 109,130,737 $ 115,239,384 (42,868) 109,173,605 $ 109,130,737 Statement of Financial Position as of December 31, 2006 and December 31, 2005 2006 2005 Assets Cash and cash equivalents Accounts receivable, net Pledges receivable, net Inventory Prepaid and other current assets Pooled investments Beneficial interests in perpetual trusts Property, buildings and equipment, net Cash restricted Deferred loan costs, net Total assets $ $ 7,079,245 1,429,760 4,502,683 346,454 925,440 39,816,706 12,763,866 71,493,116 — 199,996 138,557,266 $ $ 2,405,959 1,286,821 5,826,050 313,325 723,859 35,892,482 11,833,940 70,971,874 1,436,200 294,142 130,984,652 Liabilities and Net Assets Liabilities Accounts payable and accrued expenses Deferred revenue Long-term debt Total liabilities $ $ 2,234,352 2,697,765 18,385,765 23,317,882 $ $ 2,923,354 685,487 18,245,074 21,853,915 Net assets Unrestricted Temporarily restricted Permanently restricted Total net assets Total liabilities and net assets $ $ 67,477,030 32,559,017 15,203,337 115,239,384 138,557,266 $ $ 65,745,251 29,112,075 14,273,411 109,130,737 130,984,652 23 B OAR D O F TR USTEES Marsha R. Perelman Chair, Board of Trustees Dennis M. Wint, Ph.D. President & CEO Reneé Amoore President The Amoore Group, Inc. Gary J. Anderson, M.D. Managing Director TL Ventures LLC William J. Avery Community Volunteer Frank Baldino, Jr., Ph.D. Chairman and CEO Cephalon, Inc. Scott A. Battersby Vice President and Corporate Treasurer Unisys Corporation David J. Berkman Managing Partner Liberty Associated Partners LLC Wade H. Berrettini, M.D., Ph.D. Director, Center for Neurobiology Behavior University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Renee B. Booth, Ph.D. President Leadership Solutions, Inc. Charles R. Bridges, M.D., Sc.D. Clinical Director of Cardiac Surgery Pennsylvania Hospital Donald E. Callaghan Principal Hirtle, Callaghan & Company Michael F. Camardo Executive Vice President Lockheed Martin Susan Capps Morris Vice President of Operations Merck & Co., Inc. Robert M. Chappelear Senior Vice President Bank of America Carlos Chou SAP America, Inc. Senior Vice President, Alliances I Michael Coslov Chairman & CEO Tube City, Inc. David R. Curry Managing Partner David Curry Associates Richard H. Dilsheimer CEO Dilsheimer Communities, Inc. Denis P. O’Brien President PECO Kevin F. Donohoe President The Kevin F. Donohoe Company, Inc. Samuel J. Patterson Chairman & CEO Veridyne Inc. W. Joseph Duckworth President Arcadia Land Company Hershel J. Richman, Esq. Senior Counsel Dechert William J. Friel Executive Vice President, Corporate Banking PNC Bank Bruce D. Rubin Vice President & General Manager Sunoco, Inc. Richard A. Greenawalt Principal RMK Associates William H. Shea, Jr. Chairman, President & CEO Buckeye Pipe Line Company S. Matthews V. Hamilton, Jr. President Travel Services Company Frank P. Slattery President Quintus Paul C. Heintz, Esq. Partner Obermayer, Rebmann, Maxwell & Hippel, LLP Ann R. Sorgenti Community Volunteer Susan Y. Kim Community Volunteer Kurt M. Soukup Community Volunteer William J. Stallkamp Managing Director Penn Hudson Financial Group, Inc. Barbara Kowalczyk Senior Vice President Lincoln Financial Group Roger A. Krone Senior Vice President, Army Programs The Boeing Company Charisse R. Lillie, Esq. Vice President of Human Resources Comcast Corporation Joan N. Stern, Esq. Partner Blank Rome LLP Paul H. Woodruff, PE, DEE President Mistwood Enterprises Ira M. Lubert Principal Lubert-Adler Management, Inc. Miriam G. Mandell Vice President MGM Consulting Corporation Sandra G. Marshall Community Volunteer Donald E. Morel, Jr., Ph.D. Chairman and CEO West Pharmaceutical Services, Inc. Susan P. Mucciarone Regional Managing Director Calibre Ronald J. Naples Chairman & CEO Quaker Chemical Corporation List as of December 16, 2006 continues on next page 34 Ex-officio Members Sandra K. Baldino The Honorable Darrell L. Clarke Peter J. Collings, Ph.D. Grete Greenacre The Honorable Edward G. Rendell The Honorable John F. Street Paul G. Vallas The Honorable Anna C. Verna Honorary Member Joel N. Bloom Emeritus Members William J. Avery – Chairman Emeritus Henry M. Chance II Bowen C. Dees, Ph.D. – President Emeritus James J. Eberl, Ph.D. Richard T. Nalle, Jr. James A. Unruh – Chairman Emeritus Elected Officers Marsha R. Perelman Chair, Board of Trustees Karen Corbin Vice President, Marketing and Visitor Relations Larry Dubinski, Esq. Vice President, Development and General Counsel Dennis M. Wint, Ph.D. President and CEO Larry Dubinski, Esq. Vice President, Development and General Counsel, Secretary Donna D. Stein Senior Vice President, Finance and Administration, Treasurer and Controller Leadership Council Dennis M. Wint, Ph.D. President and CEO Philip W. Hammer, Ph.D. Vice President, Franklin Center Richard D. Rabena Vice President, Operations Steven L. Snyder, Ph.D. Vice President, Exhibits and Program Development Reid O. Styles Vice President, Human Resources Carol Parssinen, Ph.D. Senior Vice President, Center for Innovation and Science Learning Donna D. Stein Senior Vice President, Finance and Administration 35 List as of December 16, 2006 Design and Photography: Allemann Almquist & Jones Major Photography: Keith Watanabe/Allemann Almquist & Jones Cover, 4, 7 top, 9 lower, 35, 36 Lisa Godfrey: 3 left, 7 lower, 8 right, 9 top, 12 top Susan Holmes: 15 Marcie Hull: 10 Kelly & Massa: 16, 18-20 Abdul R. Sulayman/ The Philadelphia Tribune: 12 lower, 13 top left Tony Webb: 13 lower left & right 36 Science Museum & Fels Planetarium Mandell Center & Rathmann Hall of Science Tuttleman IMAX Theater The Benjamin Franklin National Memorial 222 North 20th Street Philadelphia, PA 19103-1194 215.448.1200 www.fi.edu