14th November 2008, 01:06 AM
Quote:quote:Originally posted by mercenary
I'm curious about experiences of any field archs out there who have managed to land education and outreach jobs. My partner has been trying to do this for years with no success. She is otherwise extremely skilled and motivated and has no obvious personality flaws, but has utterly failed to crack this field. We have come to the admittedly slightly paranoid conclusion that there is a prejudice against 'dirty' archaeologists in some related fields. [?]
I was also a 'dirty' field archaeologist with 20 years of field experience behind me; perseverence, dogged determination and a refusal to take no for an answer was my response, in the end it got me where I wanted to be.
Mercenary, your partner needs to be of bloody minded determination and willing to take numerous knockbacks, my best wishes go with her; its a position that I now hold and will continue for as long as is humanly possible in the full knowledge that such is hard fought for and worthwhile.
Advise your partner to stress in any application her skills and strengths in outreach experiences which she may have gained in 'dirty' fieldwork jobs. site tours for school students, lectures for U3A, projects, projects for previously excluded segments of the community are all relevant. Thinking outside the box is also extremely valuable, see my posts in other threads about outreach possibilities; I have BAJR's support for community engagement projects which are connected with diverse elements of the local community, I got my job by talking at my interview about excluded communities and on-line audiences.
May your partner be equally successful,
Oz