Subject: AIC certification plan
Several recent posts regarding AIC Certification have, I hope, revived discussion of this important, vexing issue. Of particular interest to this member was a statistic compiled by AIC and cited by Bonnie Baskin: 78.4% of members polled did not even bother to reply to a recent poll regarding the certification development process. I wonder if this response rate is typical? I have never favored certification. Nor do I think it is a good allocation of limited AIC resources. I would further assert that it is outside of the mandate of our organization, as expressed in our Bylaws. So it has always come as a surprise to me when AIC has asserted that a majority of members favored some form of certification and the Board was therefore carrying out the will of membership in promoting it. Thanks to Bonnie for pointing out how statistically skewed this assertion may have been. To hear that 78% of membership is indifferent to the process makes me wonder what has been driving it all of these years? A handful of zealous members, with the support of the Board, it would appear. If the membership is so overwhelmingly apathetic about the exercise, and it raises so many other issues for members, as expressed in this forum over years now, why do we continue to spend precious time and money on this effort? I have yet to be persuaded that it offers any benefit to the vast majority of practitioners or their clients/employers. The difficulty of testing for competence in this field and the potential shortcomings of exam methods under consideration have been outlined by others and need not be reiterated here. There is more than enough anecdotal evidence to support the common knowledge that passing an exam does not assure any level of practical competence--just as graduating from a degree program in conservation is no guarantee of good craftsmanship or judgement. Establishing an unreliable certification process could actually be a great disservice to both consumer and provider. And the process has obvious potential to undermine AIC's credibility in other areas of important service and advocacy if incompetent practitioners bear AIC Certification. Like insurance, once available and sanctioned by AIC it is likely to become a de facto requirement imposed by clients/employers on AIC members. There are also financial implications attached to the process that raise the prospect of a field divided into haves and have-nots. Thus, if AIC continues to support certification it may be responsible for fomenting future conflict between the certified and uncertified among their own ranks. Just the fact that the effort has dragged on for so long suggests to me that the practical challenges may be insurmountable in the absence of greater will from the membership. In light of the statistical fact that almost 80% of membership do not care enough about certification to reply to a poll(s) on the subject, what can we do as members do to put an end to this misguided effort and waste of assets by our professional organization? Or has it taken on a life of its own? To live on forever, unresolved? At the expense of other beneficial educational, outreach and advocacy efforts! Is there anything we can we do? Steven Prins Santa Fe, NM *** Conservation DistList Instance 22:36 Distributed: Monday, December 15, 2008 Message Id: cdl-22-36-012 ***Received on Tuesday, 9 December, 2008