Bridging the Post-Excavation Gaps: Structured Guidance and Training for Post-Excavation in Archaeology

This article explores the pressing need for consistent structured guidance and training in post-excavation (PX) skills within the field of archaeology. This need was identified through consultations with commercial practitioners facilitated by the Federation of Archaeological Managers and Employers...

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Main Authors: May Keith, Taylor James, Aitchison Kenneth
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2025-07-01
Series:Open Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2025-0049
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author May Keith
Taylor James
Aitchison Kenneth
author_facet May Keith
Taylor James
Aitchison Kenneth
author_sort May Keith
collection DOAJ
description This article explores the pressing need for consistent structured guidance and training in post-excavation (PX) skills within the field of archaeology. This need was identified through consultations with commercial practitioners facilitated by the Federation of Archaeological Managers and Employers as part of the Archaeologist’s Guide to Good Practice (AG2GP-Handbook) project. Through collaborative work with a range of archaeological practitioners across the UK, within the limits of a 1-year AHRC/UKRI budget, the project has successfully developed prototype online resources at https://archgoodpractice.com/ that embody and promote FAIR and sustainable best practices within the commercial archaeological sector for wider public benefit and use internationally. PX skills are critical for transforming and synthesising raw field data into meaningful insights about the past. The AG2GP-Handbook project focused on improving stratigraphic analysis, but this work highlighted that current educational and professional training across the UK, and beyond, often falls short of equipping archaeologists with these capabilities. The article examines related key challenges, such as gaps in university education and continuing professional development, that leave graduates and junior field practitioners ill-prepared for professional PX demands and with a very limited grasp of how their records in the field should be used afterwards.
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spelling doaj-art-906df52cf3d146ab8309c6ddf2fdbd8f2025-08-20T02:44:16ZengDe GruyterOpen Archaeology2300-65602025-07-0111120321910.1515/opar-2025-0049Bridging the Post-Excavation Gaps: Structured Guidance and Training for Post-Excavation in ArchaeologyMay Keith0Taylor James1Aitchison Kenneth2Historic England, Bristol, United KingdomDepartment of Archaeology, University of York, York, United KingdomHeadland Archaeology, Edinburgh, United KingdomThis article explores the pressing need for consistent structured guidance and training in post-excavation (PX) skills within the field of archaeology. This need was identified through consultations with commercial practitioners facilitated by the Federation of Archaeological Managers and Employers as part of the Archaeologist’s Guide to Good Practice (AG2GP-Handbook) project. Through collaborative work with a range of archaeological practitioners across the UK, within the limits of a 1-year AHRC/UKRI budget, the project has successfully developed prototype online resources at https://archgoodpractice.com/ that embody and promote FAIR and sustainable best practices within the commercial archaeological sector for wider public benefit and use internationally. PX skills are critical for transforming and synthesising raw field data into meaningful insights about the past. The AG2GP-Handbook project focused on improving stratigraphic analysis, but this work highlighted that current educational and professional training across the UK, and beyond, often falls short of equipping archaeologists with these capabilities. The article examines related key challenges, such as gaps in university education and continuing professional development, that leave graduates and junior field practitioners ill-prepared for professional PX demands and with a very limited grasp of how their records in the field should be used afterwards.https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2025-0049stratigraphic analysispost-excavation skillsonline handbookcontinuing professional developmenttraining
spellingShingle May Keith
Taylor James
Aitchison Kenneth
Bridging the Post-Excavation Gaps: Structured Guidance and Training for Post-Excavation in Archaeology
Open Archaeology
stratigraphic analysis
post-excavation skills
online handbook
continuing professional development
training
title Bridging the Post-Excavation Gaps: Structured Guidance and Training for Post-Excavation in Archaeology
title_full Bridging the Post-Excavation Gaps: Structured Guidance and Training for Post-Excavation in Archaeology
title_fullStr Bridging the Post-Excavation Gaps: Structured Guidance and Training for Post-Excavation in Archaeology
title_full_unstemmed Bridging the Post-Excavation Gaps: Structured Guidance and Training for Post-Excavation in Archaeology
title_short Bridging the Post-Excavation Gaps: Structured Guidance and Training for Post-Excavation in Archaeology
title_sort bridging the post excavation gaps structured guidance and training for post excavation in archaeology
topic stratigraphic analysis
post-excavation skills
online handbook
continuing professional development
training
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2025-0049
work_keys_str_mv AT maykeith bridgingthepostexcavationgapsstructuredguidanceandtrainingforpostexcavationinarchaeology
AT taylorjames bridgingthepostexcavationgapsstructuredguidanceandtrainingforpostexcavationinarchaeology
AT aitchisonkenneth bridgingthepostexcavationgapsstructuredguidanceandtrainingforpostexcavationinarchaeology