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Building Heritage Specialist

What To Learn

High School

What high school courses should you take if you're interested in this career? Get your answers from the Architecture and Construction cluster Design/Pre-Construction pathway.

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Thomas Visser is a professor of historic preservation and co-chair of the National Council for Preservation Education. He recommends that students interested in becoming building heritage specialists take history, chemistry and English in high school.

"Good undergraduate degrees are architectural history or history," he says, "as well as architecture or engineering. A few colleges offer undergraduate degrees in historic preservation. However, most students who wish to develop their careers as professional preservationists or heritage specialists typically go on to a master's degree."

Currently, 18 American institutions offer graduate programs in historic preservation.

David Cuming is president of an association of heritage consultants. He lists physics, chemistry, geology, geography, mathematics, social studies and any courses dealing with materials or drafting as safe bets for students who want to pursue historic preservation.

Outside of school, "there's always the local historical society to get involved in," suggests heritage specialist Craig Sims. "Or local historic sites, which often hire students in the summer for interpretative programs."

In terms of post-secondary education, "there are a lot of different avenues, a lot of different ways to get here," says Sims. He notes that engineering, architecture and history are three of them.

"What we have now that we didn't have when I was a student are programs geared towards preservation work at the university level," he adds.

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