The Future of the Intern Development Program
Updating and improving the Intern Development Program (IDP) was one of the main focuses of this year’s Annual Meeting. Two workshops were presented on the Council’s plans for the future of the program: IDP Documentation and The Future of the Intern Development Program.
IDP Documentation: Create the Best Experience
Last year the Committee on the Intern Development Program recommended a four-month rule for reporting IDP training units. After discussion at the 2006 Annual Meeting, the committee was charged to reevaluate its recommendation. This year the committee came back with a six-month documentation requirement for discussion by the Member Boards and a plan to propose a resolution at the 2008 or 2009 Annual Meeting.
The proposed rule would require interns to document and report their IDP training units after every six months of employment in a recognized training setting. Interns will have 45 business days to turn in each report after the end of the six-month period. The intent of the rule is to get supervisors and interns together more regularly to ensure the intern is exposed to and trained in the 16 training areas.
NCARB’s Director of IDP, Harry Falconer Jr., AIA, and Member Board Executive Glenda Loving from Iowa led the discussion on the proposed training documentation period.
The resolution was originally intended for this year’s Annual Meeting, but it was decided it would be better to explain to Member Boards and interns the reasoning and benefits behind the proposed rule before the Council would vote on it, Falconer said in one of two workshops held during the week to discuss the rule.
Misunderstanding of the rule has caused some to see it as an obstacle rather than a benefit and a way to improve the overall IDP program, which is its intent. “This is not a punishment, it is a way to strengthen the experience,” said Stephen Dent, IDP Committee member, New Mexico, during the discussion.
First and foremost, interns should understand that the rule would be required only for those that establish a Council Record after the implementation date tentatively scheduled for 2009 and not for those already in progress of completing IDP or those that begin before the implementation date, Falconer said.
Mississippi recently enacted an amnesty period to their rule requiring interns to report their IDP training units every four months and its Member Board Executive Jenny Wilkinson shared the board’s experience with the discussion group. “Right before the four-month rule went into effect, candidates were trying to go back five years to record their experience. That information just cannot be accurate,” said Wilkinson, “We really need this rule.” “It is a disservice to the program to not have this rule,” she said.
For more information on the proposed six-month rule, please read the Fall 2007 Direct Connection in late September.
The Future of the Intern Development Program: Evolution or Revolution?
IDP Committee chair, Kenneth Schwartz, FAIA, Virginia; Region 4 Director Scott Veazey, AIA; and recently licensed architect Marnique Heath, AIA, led the discussion on how to best improve IDP for the future.
The path to licensure is often compared to a three-legged stool. Experience, education, and examination make up the legs that keep the stool stable. Both education and examination are well researched and funded, but experience hasn’t received as much attention. In order to change that, 2007 President Bob Luke put into motion a major evaluation of the IDP program that will continue into the next couple of years.
“The ARE is the envy of other professions,” said IDP Committee chair Ken Schwartz, “Experience now needs the same attention and dedication as the ARE.”
In order to improve the IDP, NCARB and AIA conducted Core Competencies and Mentor Evaluation studies and the findings were made available at the Annual Meeting. The NCARB National office Task Force Report also released their evaluation of the performance of NCARB’s Records Department. A summary of each of the studies’ findings will be in the Fall 2007 Direct Connection.
“The IDP Program is about 30 years old,” said Scott Veazey, AIA. “The studies conducted will allow the Council to make information-based changes to improve the program,” he said.
Near the top of the list of items to address is the training of supervisors and mentors. “Supervisors and mentors are the weakest link, but perhaps the easiest to fix,” said Jerry Ritter, Minnesota. NCARB’s Committee on the IDP plans to develop a code of conduct and training for supervisors as a first step in improving their role.
Marnique Heath, AIA, completed the IDP program and is currently a supervisor and mentor at her firm in Washington, DC. She said there needs to be more guidance for both interns and supervisors as they go through the process. “There were no clear guidelines or assistance to help me learn,” she said.
Heath highly recommended that interns enroll in IDP during their final year of schooling. She also recommended the adoption of contemporaneous reporting to help keep interns focused.
“The guidance from my professor and being around other students that were doing the same thing as me was very beneficial,” she said.
“Once you enter your firm, it is easy to lose focus, I know I did,” Heath said, “If I would have had a required six-month reporting period that is being proposed, I probably would have finished two years earlier than I did.”
For more about the plan to improve the IDP program, please read the Fall 2007 Direct Connection.