Subject: Certification
I respect George Wheeler's opinion about certification, and agree with him that our field is young, lacks a full research-based consensus, and that many perceive certification as arbitrarily divisive. However, I tend to see certification very differently. Since we are willing to train conservators at the graduate level, we presumably have reached some perhaps incompletely articulated, and of course always evolving, consensus about what skills and knowledge need to be passed on to graduates. These graduates pursue different specialties and follow different career paths. The consensus includes ethics, materials science, applied chemistry, environmental effects, craft, documentation, examination techniques, history of conservation and treatment, etc., etc., etc. That said, I do not mean to imply that graduate school is the only way to master this range of information, or that conservators will not have strengths in various areas at the expense of others. However, I do believe that a certification examination designed to test competency within this broad range would have a certain value. It may encourage motivated conservators to strengthen their knowledge in areas that have lapsed. I have understood AIC's professional development initiative to be about providing training opportunities for this purpose. The fact that certified conservators would have to recertify every few years indicates that the range of relevant information could change, and that recertification would therefore be in the interest of continued professional growth. I do not think there is a prayer that non-conservators will take certification seriously unless it becomes acknowledged by conservators themselves. In museums, conservators hire other conservators. Private clients, and museum administrations, are not likely to hear about it--i.e. it will be a non-issue--unless conservators are embracing it. I see certification as a device for professional self examination, matching the background provided by one's own training and experience against the evolving basic precepts of our field. If certification ever became widely embraced by conservators, which is the current debate, only then could I see it playing a role in evaluation by allied professionals, employers, clients, etc. For whatever reason, conservators may perceive the goals of certification as divisive, and it will therefore not flourish. I will vote for it because I am confident that the process for certification can foster professional development, and because I can make my voice heard if it does not. I guess I am in favor of what it represents, and I never believed for a minute that the process would proceed without flaws and difficulties. For the same reasons, I see value in participating in the activities of our national professional organization, AIC. Ellen Pearlstein *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:35 Distributed: Monday, November 25, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-35-001 ***Received on Saturday, 23 November, 2002