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Why Get Certified ?
Originally Published Spring 2007
Recently there has been a rather lengthy discussion on the ANG chat
list regarding teachers' certification. Many comments shed more heat
than light, to be blunt. Interestingly, many opinions were
submitted, with scarcely any of them from certified teachers. Many
people suggested that they didn't care whether a teacher was
certified or not; they chose a class for seminar based on whether or
not they liked the piece. And that is as it should be.
But some people were openly hostile to certification, and even to
the certified teachers. Some claimed it was not a worthwhile
endeavor. Some actually suggested it stifled one's creativity.
Some claimed it was a waste of money and time--that it produced no
benefits. Some claimed the certified teachers felt themselves to be
superior. Well, I am here to refute that, at the risk of preaching
to the choir, for of course, many of the readers of this article are
already certified teachers, although I know some others are not.
It was twenty five years ago that I completed Teachers'
Certification, Level II at NAN, which was then called Valentine.
Before I even started certification I was already teaching locally,
and even occasionally elsewhere in my region. I designed pieces,
wrote directions, and was going along okay. So what did I get out of
two years of such demanding work?
In a word: NETWORKING! When one signs up for any of the embroidery
certifications, whether it be EGA, ANG, NAN or the Royal School, one
acquires a circle of mentors and fellow students -- who live all over
the country -- and these people become your support group, and your
champions. The counselors and directors in these programs are
invested in you and your progress; they are committed to your
success. They become your best promoters. You also develop a
relationship with your fellow candidates, helping one another with
presentations, finding suppliers, and just in general, the sharing
of ideas and knowledge. Even alumni of the program have a certain
interest in who is coming along behind them, and will try to get to
know the new graduates. The support staff at any of the cert
programs becomes a sounding board, a source of information, and
committed mentors.
So many of the people one encounters along the certification path, at
sometime in their lives, chair a seminar, or serve on a faculty
selection committee. They are often program or workshop chairman
in their home chapters. These people are familiar with the new
candidates and graduates, and are probably acquainted with their
work. So right there a certification graduate has a leg up; her name
is familiar to a lot of influential people.
And when you are selected to teach at your very first national
seminar, when you walk into the faculty reception all by yourself
most likely you will know someone. And they will know you. It's a
comfortable feeling.
But there are more benefits to certification than just that very
social one, important though it is. Certification requires you to
become organized; it requires you to meet deadlines. It requires you
to juggle several tasks simultaneously. It asks you to produce a
design on cert's schedule, not when the spirit moves you. This
reflects the life of the successful needleart teacher who may be
stitching on a piece at the same time that she is writing directions
for another, and packing kits for a chapter visit--and writing a
proposal for a seminar two years hence. Those are a lot of plates
spinning at one time, and one must be up to the task. So
certification gives one a foretaste of that hectic life.
Certification does not teach one how to stitch--there are plenty
other classes of that type offered by ANG & EGA and others. What
certification does do is teach the candidate to organize a needleart
course so that the student progresses through the elements in an
orderly fashion, with one skill building upon another, going from
easy to more difficult The candidates plan time allowances, so
there is not a crunch at the end. Paper work is an important part of
certification, for it is the one thing the student takes home with
her from your class, so a great deal of time and effort is spent
helping the candidate produce really good instruction booklets.
Certification teaches one how write the instruction booklets in a
coherent and complete fashion. The candidate is assisted with stitch
diagrams, if necessary, and with her explanation of techniques. She
learns the things to include, things easily overlooked, such as a
list of the kit contents, a road map of the piece, and a really good
photo.
In certification one is offered classes in color and design, with
special emphasis on teaching. Some of this instruction is on one's
own, but some of it comes at certification workshop. And one is
required to design 5 or 6 new pieces during the course of study, so
that at graduation one will have at least the beginnings of a pretty
impressive portfolio.
During the certification process the candidate is required to make 3
presentations, each one longer and more demanding, and differently
focused, than the prior one, so that by the time of graduation one
has stood up on her feet in front of what is perceived as a pretty
demanding group of listeners, one's peers, and the certification
staff. And at the end one teaches a mini class during the regular
seminar, so that the candidate's teaching skills may be evaluated
one more time, and help given. And then the candidate may put on
her resume that she has taught at a national seminar.
Needlearts has grown immensely in the twenty-five years since I
finished my Level II. Pieces are so much more sophisticated; no
longer are they simplistic 9 square samplers designed to teach
beginning stitches. Now the design is all important, and this has
put greater demands on the teacher, whether aspiring or experienced.
Twenty five years ago instruction booklets were rudimentary, often
handwritten and drawn, with just small diagrams of stitches. Now the
students expect very complete instruction booklets with no
ambiguities. And certainly produced on a computer.
More techniques are expected to be in each teacher's repertoire, and
she is required to be well versed in a myriad of stitches, hundreds
and hundreds of them. Students are knowledgeable themselves, and are
always looking to learn something new.
Certification addresses all these disciplines, except perhaps the
last. But even there one will grow in her stitching ability and
knowledge in the three years working toward certification, because of
her association with all those colleagues and mentors mentioned
earlier All the certification groups strive to produce an organized
and effective teacher who has participated in a variety of
experiences all geared to making her a an accomplished educator in
the needlearts.
Now are some graduates better than others? Of course! Aren't some
doctors better than others? Some school teachers? Some engineers?
We all know that's true. And among the embroidery teachers some are
better at designing, some at writing instructions, some at delivery
in class. Most are pretty good stitchers, but we all have our strong
points, and areas where others shine more than we. There is no one
perfect teacher; we can all improve somewhere, and probably still do
improve from year to year. But I am willing to wager that most of us
who have gone through certification still consider it a worthwhile
experience.
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