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New Certified Genealogist Term
From the Board for Certification website:
http://www.bcgcertification.org/pressrelease.htm
BCG Press Release
17 October 2005
BCG Credentials
For immediate release
For additional information contact:
Connie Lenzen, CG, at
clenzen@dialoregon.net
"The Board for Certification of Genealogists announced that, effective
immediately, it has consolidated three research categories into one category
that will be called Certified GenealogistSM. All those holding a current
credential as Certified Genealogical Records SpecialistSM, Certified Lineage
SpecialistSM, or Certified GenealogistSM will hold the designation of Certified
GenealogistSM. The board also established application requirements for the
single credential and voted to continue the existing renewal requirements for
those already certified.
The Board reached the decisions after extensive talks at the annual meeting of
the Board of Trustees in Salt Lake City on October 16. Incoming board president
Connie Miller Lenzen, CGSM, of Portland, Oregon, explained that the change has
been made for two reasons. “First, regardless of the type of work they do, all
genealogists have the same skills. Second, having three research categories was
confusing to both the genealogical community and the general public. The
categories were different, but the differences were not well understood. We
expect that the public can now more easily hire a certified person without being
concerned about the differences. The one thing that will not change is the
Board’s commitment to excellence in genealogical work.”
In May 2004, the Trustees approved the following motion, Lenzen continued:
“Anyone demonstrating competence in all general skill areas of research,
evidence analysis, kinship determination, and reporting should be eligible for
certification as a genealogist, without further distinction or limitation. Upon
implementation, all certified persons in any research category would hold the
designation Certified GenealogistSM.” After more than a year of discussion,
soliciting input, planning, and writing, the Board voted on the final draft of
the revised application guide.
The new requirements have been designed to test the four skill areas used by all
genealogists. The requirements are:
1. Acceptance of the Genealogist’s Code.
2. Background resume
3. Document work with a BCG-supplied document: transcribe, abstract, and
evaluate the document, prepare a research plan.
4. Document work with an applicant-supplied document: transcribe, abstract, and
evaluate the document, prepare a research plan
5. Research report prepared for a client
6. Case study of conflicting or indirect evidence
7. Kinship determination project. The project is to include at least three
couples in successive ancestral generations. The project may be in the form of a
narrative genealogy, narrative lineage, or narrative pedigree.
Complete details for each requirement will be posted on the BCG website,
www.bcgcertification.org by
December 1 of this year. Beginning January 1, 2006, only applications using the
new requirements will be accepted. The new BCG Application Guide will be
available at the National Genealogical Society conference in Chicago in June
2006.
The trustees also determined that individuals certified by BCG will still need
to renew their certification every five years and that requirements for renewal
will remain the same as they are now, regardless of the certification category
previously held. Those requirements include an updated resume and the submission
of up to four work samples. Current holders of the CGRSSM and CLSSM credentials
will have until November 1, 2006 to make the transition to the CGSM credential.
BCG’s teaching categories, Certified Genealogical LecturerSM and Certified
Genealogical InstructorSM, are not affected by the change to a single research
credential.
Also unchanged is the two-step application process. Individuals file a
preliminary application form and then have up to one year to submit their
completed portfolio. Those who have already filed a preliminary application form
will have the opportunity to decide whether to continue under the previous
requirements or convert to the new requirements. Any preliminary applications
filed on or after January 1, 2006 must follow the new requirements.
Since its founding in 1964, The Board for Certification of Genealogists has
promulgated--in research, lectures, and publications--attainable, uniform
standards of competence and ethics that have become generally accepted
throughout the field. Its publication, The BCG Genealogical Standards Manual,
sets forth the currently accepted standards for all areas of genealogical
research."
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