Report of the MCAA Education Committee

Words: Danks Burton

Live Webinar Series

The MCAA’s Live Webinar Series continued to grow in 2017, building on the success from previous years. Over 2,000 attendees registered for nearly sixty courses last year. Over 1,000 attended the live presentations. Topics ranged from OSHA investigations and jobsite safety to quality assurance and business success for masons.

Nearly every webinar in 2017 was offered at no charge to both MCAA members and non-members. The free webinars allowed the MCAA to collect vital information on which topics are important to mason contractors, and create custom marketing programs to target specific contractors about upcoming opportunities. Additionally, the MCAA was able to obtain valuable contact information from non-members to promote membership to their companies.

Industry suppliers and manufacturers will be able to sponsor webinars throughout 2018. Sponsorship opportunities include:
  • $250 Members / $500 Non-Members to sponsor one individual webinar
  • $750 Members / $1,000 Non-Members to host one specialty webinar
  • $2,000 Members / $2,500 Non-Members to sponsor five individual webinars, and host two specialty webinars
All sponsors will be thanked during the webinar and their logo will be displayed at the beginning of each session. Sponsors will also have access to the registered attendee list for webinars they host or sponsor.

Visit www.masoncontractors.org/live to view a list of upcoming webinars for 2018.

Best Practices Seminar

The Education Committee is working to complete the development of the Best Practices Seminar (formerly the Masonry Quality Institute). The course will feature eight, two-hour segments including:
  • Quality Assurance
  • Human Resources
  • Coordination and Teaming with Other Trades
  • Best Masonry Processes and Practices
  • Sales and Marketing of Your Company and the Industry
  • Best Business Management Practices
  • Best and Most Efficient Equipment Practices
  • Engineered Masonry
The segments will be taught by mason contractors. The seminar will be offered during future MCAA Conventions and individually online as webinars.

Detail Videos

The Education Committee is looking into the development of short videos that focus on details of the jobsite. Suggested topics include:
  • Covering Walls
  • Flashing
  • Material Handling
  • Mixing and Retempering Mortar by Hand
  • Proper Lifting
These videos will be produced in conjunction with Masonry and will likely be included with a written piece. The videos will be available on both the MCAA and Masonry websites.

Spanish Translation

Masonry magazine published multiple articles in Spanish throughout 2017. Additional technical talks and safety toolbox talks will be translated in the near future.

The Year Ahead

The Education Committee will continue to provide top quality education programs to mason contractors and work to develop new courses for the masonry industry.
The Behind-the-Wall Secrets Every Mason Already Knows (But Some Ignore)
March 2026

You’ve been around long enough to know this already: stone doesn’t fail on the face; it fails behind the wall. You can lay the prettiest veneer in the county, but if the prep is junk, that wall’s gonna start telling on you after a couple of winters. Manu

From the Mound to the Mortar: Jon Rauch’s Tall Order in the Masonry Industry
March 2026

In the record books of Major League Baseball, Jon Rauch is a literal giant. At 6 feet, 11 inches, he remains the tallest player to ever step onto a Big League mound. But today, the Olympic Gold Medalist and 11-season MLB veteran isn’t looking for a strike

Case Study: The Scoop
March 2026

Leading UK architecture firm, Corstorphine & Wright, has announced the completion of ‘The Scoop’, a unique concave office building in Southwark, London. The innovative design reuses an existing building and integrates a conical cut-out façade in white gla

Executing Color-Driven Designs Without Compromising Craftsmanship
March 2026

On today’s jobsites, masonry contractors are being asked to do more than install manufactured stone veneer (MSV). They’re being asked to interpret design trends and execute them with precision. Homeowners arrive with curated Pinterest boards. Designers r