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Date: | Mon, 27 Apr 1998 16:50:52 -0500 |
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Steve asks a simple question to which I believe there is no simple
answer. I will hazard an answer anyway.
My glib reply aside, archaeology is one of the few disciplines that
involve the observation/collection of complex data in the field and
data analysis and interpretation efforts in the lab/office that are so
distinct and so different from one another with respect to the skills
and abilities required.
Yes, there are the recently minted MAs with only a couple of years
experience who don't really have a clue about how to do fieldwork or
read soil, recognize features, etc. On the other hand, there are the
experienced field hands for whom excavation is intuitive and almost
"second nature" who have no idea of the broad interpretive context of
the material that they excavate, let alone the applications of social
theory for that analysis. Obviously, meaningful analysis of data can
not take place unless the field data are appropriately observed and
recorded. So, both aspects are necessary to the overall enterprise.
And I won't even talk about supervisory and management skills!
What to do? Personally, I don't think folks should be admitted to
grad school without three or four years of diverse field and
laboratory experience under their belts! They can learn supervision
while in grad school, maybe if given the chance, but basic field
smarts comes from long experience in the dirt, and preferably in an
environment where the staff makes preliminary interpretations in the
field which are widely discussed. This too is a luxury in the world of
short budgets, long commutes, and family obligations that creep up
seemingly without warning.
Seems that what I am talking about puts a considerable burden on field
supervisors and other senior staff to treat projects as educational
opportunities for more junior staff. Now there's an idea!
John
John P. McCarthy, SOPA
Sr. Project Manager - Cultural Resources
Greenhorne & O'Mara, Inc.
9001 Edmonston Road
Greenbelt, MD 20770
301-220-1876 voc
301-220-2595 fax
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