© Dr Gerard Lynch
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INTERNATIONALLY ACKNOWLEDGED MASTER BRICKLAYER, EDUCATOR, HISTORIC BRICKWORK CONSULTANT, CARVER & AUTHOR
A craft is learned and refined through years of dedicated study and relevant full-
Quality craft education and training ensures a sound understanding of what underpins
all craftsmanship—traditional and modern materials, tools, equipment, technology,
and the skills of how to prepare and correctly apply them. It develops an enquiring
mind that seeks to evaluate work and to reason-
Differentiating craft education from training can be tricky, as in many respects they are two sides of the same coin, and ongoing throughout a working life. The writer sees education as the acquisition of the practical, theoretical, arithmetical, and technological knowledge that provides the foundation for a craft and its skills, by studying relevant textbooks, attending specified formal lessons, and through ongoing oral discourse with those of skill, knowledge, and experience from whom one is learning. Training is the organized sequential acquisition, development, and refinement of the numerous elementary and advanced practical skills that are part of a craft, by being surrounded by, observing, and learning from those who are more proficient in a certain craft.
Apprenticeships—being taught, over a number of years, about traditional and contemporary
craft materials, tools, and techniques—are the bedrock of craft heritage. Historically
apprenticeships produced "journeymen" and, with some years of qualified experience,
future craftsmen capable of "working to demand," balancing the full needs of the
building industry, whether new-
On-

After the Second World War, the advent and rapid progress of relatively simple fixing
skills and faster construction techniques meant that building projects increasingly
used cheaper semi-
Craft training in the United Kingdom since the early 1990s has been delivered through
the "National Vocational Qualification" (NVQ) system, designed to standardize qualifications
throughout industry, guaranteeing competence of "trainees" by demonstrating that
they satisfy specific performance standards. This replaced indentured time-
1. Industrial Training Boards (ITBs) tripartite (government, employers and unions) training boards in industry established by the 1964 'Industrial Training Act', and financed by employers through a statutory levy/grant system with firms that provide training. The Construction Industry Training Board, is the revenant board for the building industry.
The former CGLI apprenticeship system had its deficiencies: no national, unified
system of performance criteria to mark practical work in college workshops, linked
to acceptable standards for site work; and subjective marking by the class tutor.
Bright students could gain excellent marks for academic work but barely pass the
all-
Industry and educators failing to recognize and reverse this trend are losing the
highest expressions of the crafts to narrowly tutored "specialists" and "conservators,"
unqualified in them. Conservation and restoration were, and must never be, divorced
from their craft home. They are an essential part of the full repertoire of a qualified
craftsperson—as they have always been down through history. The writer’s apprenticeship,
in the traditional and modern aspects of his craft, combined with hard work, study,
and dedication, fully equipped him to work on new build and the repair or restoration
of all periods of historic brickwork, as it was deemed part of craftsperson’s broad
range of skills. In this respect one applauds the ethos being engendered at the new
American College of the Building Arts, in Charleston, S.C., where they uphold many
of the writer’s beliefs on the importance of good quality and all-
Modern craft skills training is simply not balancing the needs of the overall building industry.

Regaining the former balance requires putting value back into craft education and
training, to attract and retain dedicated students who have the potential to achieve
fully respected qualifications by all professionals across the whole industry. Vital
to its success will be the professional retention of the foremost peer-
Students once more must be reconnected to traditional materials, their preparation,
and the skills of handcrafting and use, to be able to eventually replicate selected
enrichments from past centuries with authenticity within their apprenticeship course.
Yet they must also fully learn about up-
Bureaucracy and overhead costs should be kept low, so that most funding is spent
within workshops and classrooms. With appropriate levels of funding by colleges,
with sponsorships, and with financial and in-
This approach requires recruiting students with the right attitude, aptitude, and ability to succeed in the crafts. Young people today, however, are often influenced by prevailing social attitudes that see little virtue in the ethos of working with one’s hands and years of study to qualify. This must be addressed so that both parents and their children view traditional skilled crafts as dignified and fulfilling, with real status.
One must also factor in to any new craft education and training programs, semi-
As head of Trowel Trades at Bedford College, Bedford, England, (1987-
Part-
This off-
After the student completes formal school education and decides to learn a craft, a learning agreement based on the "indenture" could be drawn up that binds the apprentice and company to an approved complementary course. This would assign responsibility to the student to be receptive to work and learning the craft, attend agreed courses, be well behaved, and safeguard and uphold craft knowledge and skills. Employer and college responsibilities to provide safe, productive work and a conducive learning environment, and to meet the specified terms of the appropriate year of apprenticeship would also be set down. The examining authority that sets the syllabi and oversees the apprenticeship would monitor progress and compensation .
Upon successful completion, the agreement could be formally signed off by employer, college, and examining bodies and presented to the newly qualified craftsperson in a formal ceremony similar to university graduation day. Names and qualifications could then be added to an approved national and international register of qualified craftspersons.
Radical change is necessary for current craft education and training. There is no
coherent future vision in current craft training systems, only optimism that somehow
things will simply work out in the future. They will not! We live in an age of image
makeovers, and the recent revival of the name "apprentice" instead of "trainee" is
a good example of trying to recreate an image; but as with most image makeovers,
this lacks real meaning. Those of us fortunate to have had all-
We must invest quality time, energy, and money into well-
One ignores a craft’s history, knowledge, and skills at one’s peril, perhaps best summed up by this old Chinese proverb:
"If a man dwells on the past then he robs the present. But if a man ignores the past then he may rob the future. The seeds of our destiny are nurtured by the roots of the past."
Dr. Gerard C. J. Lynch, LCG, Cert Ed. MA (Dist), PhD, is an internationally acknowledged master bricklayer, historic brickwork consultant, author and educator based in Buckinghamshire, England.
Published in 'Forum Journal' Vol 19, No 4, Summer 2005, The National Trust for Historic Preservation, Washington DC, U.S.A