21st March 2010, 08:16 PM
(This post was last modified: 21st March 2010, 08:58 PM by mididoctors.)
BAJR Wrote:I hear more and more the issues of skills and standards being raised... one should see (as many have also said to me) Archaeology Fieldwork is a skilled Craft... one that needs training and learning in the manner of a master mason or carpenter.
The more skill and the adherence to a common standard (which can be judged) should relate to a pay level that is comensurate.... otherwise what is the point when a raw recruit can earn teh same as a 10 year old hand who can draw a section with one hand while interpreting a complex series of intercutting features with the other... Surely Skills count?
the issue is standards are not enforced... why not?
Because low standards produce no discernible difference than high standards in the public eye
it doesn't matter to a great degree what the standard is because the monitoring regime is not powerful or empowered enough to discriminate between a good or bad job and moreover even if they are aware they feel obliged to collaborate in covering up poor practice so as not to show archaeology in a poor light.
again this disrepute issue.. a monitor is placed in a difficult position if the archaeology is cr4p...
it all comes down to the monitoring and standards... if archaeological practice has to be of a higher standard to achieve the goals laid out in the method statements and monitors come down hard on units conducting bad practice pay and conditions take care of themselves .
thats why undermining the credibility of our current understanding and practices in the academic and public domain opens the door to change.. the truth will tend to itself if people believe in what they are doing and make these new ideas a force that can not be ignored... the monitors themselves should placed under public pressure (the press?) for ensuring standards.
when their postion is scrutinised they are freer to act against poor practice for the public good because they are societies custodians of the record so to speak
NOTE ABSOLUTELY NOTHING HAS TO CHANGE VIS A VIS REGULATION ETC its a perceptual and cultural change that cost nobody anything directly in the short term
if you; create, publish or disseminate ideas that question the current standards that in time harden up as an accepted new standard no one has other choice but to follow that path.
A few years ago there was a move to rewrite the 1994 site manual at Molas which was essentially a carte blanche to rewrite a new set of standards and was avery postive thing...
they had the ability to revamp the entire industry as the manual was a default standard... we could have written what the hell we liked...
Molas at the time was at the time employing external business consultants who were advising them on business developments.... the exact in and outs of it all are unknown to me but the new manual idea was dropped and the personnel put in charge of its rewrite sidelined and effectively placed in an untenable position one resigned.. stunning stupidity of almost galactic proportions
think about what an opportunity this was and how it was squandered... astonishing madness
the same consultants advised Molas to position and organize itself for large projects...and as a result nearly went bust in a downturn lay corner shop economists like myself foresaw and TOLD the management was coming..
its hard to imagine how one could go about making things worse really