On Mon, 15 May 2006, steven c wrote:
What I'm trying to sell is (are?) my skills and abilities in maintaining such an archive...which runs into the present-day challenge of "You say you know this? Okeh, show me a valid and properly endorsed graduate-school-level DEGREE
Which is something of my point...from my perspective, there is no degree which provides the necessary training to oversee a recordings archive. Yet, Universities being in the business of selling degrees... well it is a bit like having a Toyota dealer driving around in a different brand of car.
Adding to, what seems to me, the contradictory nature of it all...library school education places little to no value on knowledge of anything other than librarianship. Using my own "institution" as an example, I can think of only two librarians with graduate degrees in the subjects areas they oversee. Most of them have some general undergraduate degree in the humanities and a graduate degree in librarianship. While I have no statistical information to support it, (only informal conversations with other librarians) subject specific education, and/or experience is usually valued only at the best of institutions.
Karl