13th February 2006, 02:01 PM
[quote]Originally posted by mercenary
I would fit in your category as a mature digger as I entered the profession at 28. What I really object to is the 50 something ex policemen or teachers that are independently wealthy (relative to me) who accept the low wages and temporary contracts because they see it as a fun hobby rather than their bread and butter.
FYI I have seen plenty of these people in the last ten years , so it is not a non-starter. Not only do they take away a job from a new graduate, but much more damagingly they reinforce in the minds of the aforementioned managers that crap wages and short term contracts are still an acceptable way to operate in the 21st Century. Overall a blow to professionalization in the industry'
We'll have to agree to disagree there mercenary. Such people exist but not in the numbers to affect the way that field unit managers cost up jobs. They do not constitute the reason why field archaeologists are low paid and why they continue to be low-paid. The reasons for low pay existing in the profession are far more wide-reaching than a very small proportion of the digging population being over 50 and willing to put up with the wages.
Troll - diggers are not specialists. That would mean every aspect of fieldwork is a specialism. Why can't we just accept that the job is a valuable one without having to use the 'specialist' tag. You devalue the term by applying it to every field operative.
I would fit in your category as a mature digger as I entered the profession at 28. What I really object to is the 50 something ex policemen or teachers that are independently wealthy (relative to me) who accept the low wages and temporary contracts because they see it as a fun hobby rather than their bread and butter.
FYI I have seen plenty of these people in the last ten years , so it is not a non-starter. Not only do they take away a job from a new graduate, but much more damagingly they reinforce in the minds of the aforementioned managers that crap wages and short term contracts are still an acceptable way to operate in the 21st Century. Overall a blow to professionalization in the industry'
We'll have to agree to disagree there mercenary. Such people exist but not in the numbers to affect the way that field unit managers cost up jobs. They do not constitute the reason why field archaeologists are low paid and why they continue to be low-paid. The reasons for low pay existing in the profession are far more wide-reaching than a very small proportion of the digging population being over 50 and willing to put up with the wages.
Troll - diggers are not specialists. That would mean every aspect of fieldwork is a specialism. Why can't we just accept that the job is a valuable one without having to use the 'specialist' tag. You devalue the term by applying it to every field operative.