Subject: AIC certification plan
Christopher Augerson <chris [at] augersonartconservation__com> writes >Regarding the proposed plan for AIC certification of conservators, I >oppose it for the reasons outlined below. In evaluating it, I draw >on my knowledge of accreditation schemes in the UK, France and >Belgium, with which I have first-hand experience. I appreciate the >work that many have done, but I see no need to change from the >current, less costly system of AIC membership categories such as >Professional Associate. Moreover, I see potential pitfalls >associated with its implementation beyond its financial cost. Most >importantly, I believe such certification will misallocate AIC's >limited resources and that of its members. Christopher Augerson's wise, cogent, and comprehensive posting arguing against the AIC's proposed certification program is immensely welcome. I hope it will join with Barbara Appelbaum and Paul Himmelstein's recent letter in AIC News, a letter which Augerson also cites, to put some brakes on AIC's headlong pursuit of certification and instead help generate the debate that we AIC members must have on an issue of such importance. I would like to enlarge upon Christopher Augerson's point that test-based certification is a significant step downward in quality from the review accorded AIC Professional Associates candidates, whose knowledge, thinking, and actual hands-on performance must be evaluated by three PAs or Fellows. Doesn't it in fact undermine us to lower our professional standards by adopting such a test rather than a thoroughgoing three-person review? Don't lowered standards fly in the face of the overall purpose of certification? And do we really want to give our institutional approval to conservators who may write great short essays, but whose practical work, though submitted, is never verified? This makes no sense at all to me. In addition, I want to express my concern that our AIC officers are failing to provide the unbiased leadership that the certification issue deserves. For example, last summer's questionnaire includes an item that must rank as one of the great howlers of questionnaire partisanship: Asking if respondents would vote Yes or No on certification if they had to vote right away, the questionnaire describes the current proposed model as "the certification model that after years of work the CITF believes is the best model for AIC. ... " This is like advertising for a Yes. And there's more. The "strong" results that AIC later reported in favor of the certification model could be obtained only through selective presentation of the numbers. Specifically, 78.4% of the 2,880 AIC members who received the questionnaire never responded, representing the majority response. Should you count people who, in droves, vote No Response? Absolutely if you are interested in assessing your members' thinking. Yet AIC ignored the 78.4%. Of the 621 (21.6%) who did respond, 393 voted Yes to the howler above and 227 voted No, and AIC concluded that 63.5% of the respondents were in favor of the certification plan and 36.6% against it. True, yes, but misleading, for the actual results applied to the full questionnaire group of 2,880 are 78.4% No Response, 13.6% Yes, and 7.9% No. Strong positive results? Hardly. As someone who once did graduate-level statistics and later market research, I can tell you exactly what the results mean: relatively small groups of typically more experienced conservators have decidedly pro or con opinions, though usually with qualifications (see online answers to other questions), but the overwhelming majority of the membership is simply not engaged. AIC will have to open up the discussion in a compelling and, I urge, even-handed way before it can involve and then ascertain the views of the bulk of its members. In sum, let's ask our AIC officers to step back, to take a nonpartisan stance, and to get some productive debate going. For starters, I strongly advocate that we take up Augerson, Appelbaum, and Himmelstein's suggestion that enhancements of the current PA and Fellow programs will be superior to the proposed certification model as well as more appropriate to our particular traditions and orientations as American conservators. Bonnie Baskin Objects conservator Oakland, CA *** Conservation DistList Instance 22:32 Distributed: Friday, December 5, 2008 Message Id: cdl-22-32-002 ***Received on Friday, 21 November, 2008