Subject: Unpaid positions
I've been following the discussion about conservation training programs with interest, as you might expect. The discussion is timely as we carry out a GSLIS-wide curriculum assessment and prepare for our upcoming reaccreditation review. Preservation and Conservation Studies has always been a little different from the museum conservation programs, as all of you probably know. We educate students for a very specific context, and though not all of our graduates eventually or permanently work within it, our curriculum targets a different spectrum of materials than the museum programs. We assume that many objects PCS graduates will be responsible for will have limited value in their original form (e.g. the bulk of recorded sound, moving images, contemporary newspapers, large-edition monographs, serials, etc.). While some of our graduates become conservators of rare books and other artifacts, and many collections include historical and beautiful objects, in general we expect a relatively modest portion of the materials that form our baseline will warrant complex individual-item treatment. In another distinction, most of the organizations we envision training for have huge collections with some redundancy between or even within institutions. The scale of the preservation and conservation challenge they present, the vision of Paul Banks, and our historic funding sources, in particular the National Endowment for the Humanities, have led us to emphasize preventive and whole-collections approaches, management skills, and context-based decision making. We feel fortunate that the libraries and archives continue to provide more positions than our graduates can fill. We also recognize that this is cyclical, and we're not sanguine about the short-term future. Information agencies are scrambling to meet pressures for online access to their resources; this changes their skill requirements and economics. Information technology is cumulative, not successive. Digital collections are the next practical and philosophical preservation challenge. Like museum conservation programs, we respond to such change by increasing the body of knowledge students must absorb. I was particularly struck by comments from Laurie Booth and Mark Clarke. I was privileged to apprentice in an active private practice and then to move to a regional center where I worked with client institutions across the whole spectrum of resources, collections, and scale. Both experiences were extraordinary because I learned from people who were among the very best in their fields. They gave me a powerful grounding in the realities of conservation practice. There's plenty of work available--what there isn't always is money to pay for it. As Laurie points out, that's a potent argument for grantsmanship, marketing, and management in conservation training. As Peggy Ellis points out, the formal training programs address those now, if we haven't always. If it isn't enough, well, you can only fit so much into a few years. The polishing comes from doing, not classroom learning. Mark Clarke raises important issues that seem to be from the perspective of a European program, although he doesn't identify it as such. All of the North American conservation programs demand considerable preparation. We expect applicants to talk to working conservators and preservation administrators, program graduates, and current students. We expect (and in some cases require massive) pre-program experience in a working lab or equivalent. We (at PCS at least) are ruthlessly honest about our philosophy, career prospects, and the demands of training. I bet the other programs are the same. By the time most students arrive at UT they have few illusions; if they retain them at the start they've lost them by the finish, with sadness on all sides. What I think they gain (along with subject knowledge) is a telescoped education in problem-solving, decision-making, and life-long learning. I absolutely believe those skills will help them build satisfying careers, in or out of this field. I'd be surprised to hear that anyone chooses conservation or preservation management for job security or pay. We choose it because we love the work and believe it's important. If it ceases to compensate us for the sacrifices, we move on to another context or another field. I know what I think after three and a half years at PCS. I am passionate about our students and the conservation and preservation of cultural heritage...and sometimes I want to beat my head against a wall. I want to hear what recent program graduates and conservators trained in other models have to say. Why have you become conservators? Are you struggling to find a job, or the right job? Are you supporting yourself in private practice? Are you bitter or disillusioned about your training? The field? Has anyone following the Distlist moved away from conservation, and if so, why and to what? Karen Motylewski, Director and Senior Lecturer Conservation and Preservation Studies Graduate School of Library and Information Science SZB564/D7000, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78704-1276 512-471-8290 Fax: 512-471-8285 *** Conservation DistList Instance 12:51 Distributed: Tuesday, December 15, 1998 Message Id: cdl-12-51-009 ***Received on Thursday, 10 December, 1998