jamesdevine said:
Also how can you say someone has mastered fire by friction unless you have been there with them in every possible situation. the bow drill alone would require a life time of observation. We also don't want to create specailists in a particular area as that is not bushcraft that is simply fire lighting.
Just my thoughts
James
I don't think, that bushcraft is that easilly classified, that you will be masters of specifics as you will always be learning.
Begginers, intermediate and advanced courses look good, but once you start getting into the intermediate and advanced levels you would start to have problems. A begginers course would incorporate basics / fundamentals where knowledge is imparted and basic skills practiced.
When you start doing intermediate and advanced levels you would probably be better of doing individual modules that raise your skill levels in a series of skills, when you have completed the seperate skill sets to move onto the next level (overall level, intermediate to advanced for instance) take an assessment similair to an NVQ. As long as the syllabus is freely available there is no reason why people cannot teach themselves and if they have an issue with a specific skill then they could do a course.
Pro's
You will be very profficient by the time you hit advanced.
Cons
It could be very expensive unless your work involved practicing these skills on a day to day basis.
Problems,
1.Who sets the standards?
2.Could we get the relevant bushcraft instructors around a table for long enough to put together and agree on a syllabus before they go for each others throats?
3.It also implies a regulating body as far as testing is concerned, who is doing the backing financially and who is doing the testing?
4.Locations for testing, as much as I would like to have a garden that I could practice bushcraft skills in, it is not likely that a tester would come there even if I did, so that effectively means test areas or centers, who pays for and maintains them?
Answers on a postcard???