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Date: | Wed, 16 Dec 2015 15:58:45 -0500 |
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> I don't mean to sound pessimistic but I have never been given an answer
> other than its something to pat yourself on the back about and point to
> in
> a power point slide...
Unless you're in academia (which has its own set of certifications to
which the above observation also applies), the answer is exactly what
Prof. Bromenshenk wrote about the new edition of the Hive and the Honey
Bee book: things change. I don't think that there's anyone alive who would
claim that they know everything about bees. Getting a certificate is just
a convenient way of expanding/updating one's education is all and we live
in a society that awards and values such efforts. It's a shortcut synopsis
of one's resume: instead of looking at what one has done and forming a
judgment, one know at least something about the person with the
certificate.
One thing about the EAS certificate is that it evaluates one's ability to
be a honeybee evangelist: that is, be able to intelligently talk about
bees to non-professionals. I think that this is an extremely valuable
skill given what's going on right now and sorely needed. This Sunday's New
York Times had a full-time ad from the National Resource something with a
dead bee and a screetch against Beyer accusing them of killing all the
bees. If NYT is on the 'bees are dying' bandwagon, we're in deep trouble...
Przemek
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