Subject: Certification
I think that this has been one of the most substantive discussions on OSG-L; it has been educational to see so many different points of view expressed. No matter what the opinions expressed are, what is universal in all of this is our collective passion for our profession. It occurs to me that the certification issue is like a mirror--that everyone "sees" and "reads" something very different in the reflection. So that is why this discussion has revealed more about ourselves and where our perceptions about the profession and its direction lie than anything else. It would perhaps be very useful to hear from those involved directly in the certification effort exactly how the AIC intends to use it: Is it an instrument to foster professional development? Is it a "gateway" or "threshold" into the profession? Is it an instrument to be used by the consumers of conservation to make distinctions? I think that the more "benefits" that are espoused for certification the murkier the waters become for us out here in thinking through the issue. There is also some measure of concern about the effects of certification, intended or unintended, and how that will affect us. I think that George Wheeler's concern about "innovation" in the field is an excellent example of this. I, for one, am in favor of keeping the aspirations for certification very modest. David Harvey Artifacts 2930 South Birch Street Denver CO 80222 303-300-5257 *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:37 Distributed: Wednesday, December 4, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-37-005 ***Received on Thursday, 28 November, 2002