Gene Heskett wrote: > On Friday 15 May 2009, Eric Brombaugh wrote: >> al davis wrote: >>> On Thursday 14 May 2009, Joerg wrote: >>>> What I bemoan is the utter lack of hands-on experience. Most >>>> newly minted engineers can't even solder properly. Pathetic. >>> So sad. >>> >>> I recently saw a post on an email list that did a very good job >>> at illustrating, by example, why this is such a problem. You >>> should read it. >>> >>> http://tinyurl.com/p7aze6 >> AHHHH! The deadpan meta-irony makes my head asplode! >> >> Eric > > Yes, there is that. But that comment also demonstrates all too well that old > saw about "those that can't, teach". Why? Cuz they won't pay someone who > _can_ what he can get for that talent in the tech labor marketplace, by about > 2-3x. >
Not necessarily. Many people are willing to teach, whether that be high school or whatever. Out of a "give back to the community" mentality and the pay is secondary or, at older age, almost irrelevant to them. Yes, just like the open source guys. But then lots of road blocks are thrown in front of them. Like having to first get teaching credentials and so on. Costs time you may not have, and money. I really don't understand why someone who explains electronic design to students and has decades of hands-on experience needs a "credential". My second chemistry teacher did not have any teaching credential, had a hard to understand Czech accent, and was one of the best teachers I ever had in my life. He was a lead engineer at a chemical plant that makes laundry detergents, on "emergency loan" to our school. -- Regards, Joerg http://www.analogconsultants.com/ _______________________________________________ geda-user mailing list geda-user@moria.seul.org http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user