16.00 – 18.00 Closing the gap – rebuilding ecological survey skills in the professional sector
Sally Hayns joined the Chartered Institute of Ecology and Environmental Management (CIEEM) as CEO in the summer of 2010, having previously worked for a number of environmental NGOs. Her first job was teaching ecology for the Field Studies Council at Nettlecombe Court on Exmoor. Throughout her career, Sally has been keen to promote greater understanding of the natural world and she sees promoting fieldwork and identification skills as an integral part of ensuring that society has the knowledge and skills to care for the environment we share.
CIEEM is the leading professional membership body representing and supporting ecologists and environmental managers in the UK, Ireland and abroad. Established in 1991 and receiving their Royal Charter in 2013, CIEEM has members drawn from across the employment sectors including local authorities, government agencies, NGOs, environmental consultancy, academia and industry. Sally will join the debate from 4pm to answer questions about CIEEM’s ecological skills research findings and their recently launched degree accreditation scheme and Competency Framework.
Join us from 4pm today to chat online with Sally...
Welcome Sally. Many thanks for joining us today
How was it that you originally got involved with ecology, Sally? And did it involve much in the way of recording?
From the outset, IEEM members presented training courses covering a range of topics from animal handling to gving evidence at public inquiries. General Species and habitat survey skills were perhaps assumed to be +/- innate or picked up at an early age. Has that balance changed over the years?
Hi Sally,
as someone who interacts with recorders, my impression is the more experienced (and well connected) specialists seem to pick up bits and pieces of work as subcontractors for ecologists – particularly good small consultancies who recognise when it would be appropriate to call in a particular entomologist or lichen specialist etc. but also for conservation bodies and other land managers. This is not usually a full-time job for the specialist.
My question is really naive as this may happen already – could CIEEM do anything to help experienced “amateur” recorders consider this type of micro-scale consultancy work to help plug the skills gap? And could CIEEM and also to raise awareness that this is the right thing for their members to do? i.e. Is the problem not just one of trying to get big companies to pay for their staff to do specialist training, but that they don’t see the need/value for anything other than PS/BAP or know when to call a specialist in (and then there is the question of how to know who to call)?
Sorry for naive question from a non-ecologist!
Teresa.
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Various consultancies have made a point up skilling–up young trainees in the past, Sally. Is this likely to feature in the appraisal/accreditation of companies (rather than individuals)?
I think this is something we’ll particularly look forward to. It’s important in many ways and to many people - not least to young girls and their grandads.
Thank you very much for our time – and all your thoughtful answers today, Sally.