Subject: Online course on insurance and contracts for conservation
The Foundation of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works presents a FAIC online course: Mitigating Risk: Contracts and Insurance for Conservation FAIC <URL:http://aic.stanford.edu> is pleased to offer an online course to meet the needs of conservators who own or manage a professional conservation business or laboratory, "Mitigating Risk: Contracts and Insurance for Conservation" provides readings, case studies, work sheets, presentations, and exercises to get you thinking and planning. You will identify the risks you face, and learn how to reduce those risks and how to manage risks through the use of contracts, insurance, and other means. Online discussion forums allow you to draw on the combined experience of other participants, the course facilitator, and select outside experts. Best of all, "Mitigating Risk" comes to you. All you need is a computer with Internet access and you are ready to learn. "Mitigating Risk" is a four-week course. The course will begin on Thursday, July 10 and continue, with new activities and discussions each week, through August 6. The course site will remain available for reference and downloads for two weeks after the course ends. The instructor, Sarah Lowengard, will guide discussions and offer tips and resources beyond what you find on the course site. You may work on the course at any time within each week. What the course will cover: How to identify risks Components of a good contract How contracts can be used to reduce risks How to identify and locate appropriate insurance for your needs Managing contracts Creating an overall risk mitigation strategy Learning Objectives: Upon completion of this course, you will be able to: Define basic vocabulary relating to contracts, insurance and liability. Identify the three most significant risks to your conservation business. Understand how to use contracts, insurance and other measures to reduce the impact of identified risks Recognize the components of a well-constructed contract. Read and understand three basic contracts (e.g., insurance, rental agreement, contract for conservation treatment). Identify the types of insurance that may be required by law in your state. Identify the role of legal and insurance professionals in managing your business risks. Time Requirements: Expect to spend at least six hours per week on the course--roughly the equivalent of attending a full-day workshop each week. You will use this time to complete exercises, and to read and respond to the work of others in the course. You choose when, according to your own schedule--at noon during your lunch break, in the evening with a cup of coffee by your side, or at six in the morning in your favorite jammies. Technical Requirements: PC or Mac with Internet access and reasonably up-to-date browser Registration: The fee for this course is $200 for AIC members, $300 for non-members. Registration forms are available at <URL:http://aic.stanford.edu/education/workshops/index.html> The registration deadline is July 8, 2008. Participants will be accepted in order of receipt of paid registration. Enrollment is limited, so early registration is advised. About the Facilitator: Sarah Lowengard, Ph.D., has more than twenty years' teaching experience in both formal university classrooms and informal education programs. She has developed, taught, or led courses, workshops, and tutorials in art conservation, collections care, history, academic research and materials analysis. A private-practice art conservator since 1979, she initiated the Conservation Course Syllabus Web pages for Conservation OnLine and served on the AIC Education and Training Committee. This course was created with funding from the Getty Foundation. It is presented with funding from the FAIC Endowment for Professional Development, which is supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and by gifts from members and friends of the American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works. For more information, contact: Eric Pourchot, Professional Development Director American Institute for Conservation of Historic and Artistic Works 1156 15th Street, NW, Suite 320 Washington, DC 20005 202-452-9545, ext. 5 Fax: 202-452-9328 epourchot<-a t->aic-faic< . >org *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:65 Distributed: Sunday, June 15, 2008 Message Id: cdl-21-65-019 ***Received on Tuesday, 10 June, 2008