Paul Chapman":1xsi3cab said:
I really don't think there is any substitute for teaching kids the basic skills... The point about learning all the basic joints and tool control is that you can go on from there and make almost anything (OK, with a bit of practice).
Paul
Very true Paul. The first making project students on my Foundation Degree course do is a Hand Production Techniques project. Hand planing a board flat and squaring an edge. Marking out all the joints (dovetails) and cutting them by hand. 95% of the students that start the course have little or no idea how to tune, sharpen, or use a handtool to start with.
By the end of the ten week module, some of the basic hand woodworking skills develop in the learners up to a rudimentary level, or better, ie, good enough to do some of the primary tasks such as sharpening a plane or chisel, cutting reasonably closely, or better to an accurately measured and marked line, etc. Some learners have developed enough skill by then to work neatly, crisply and very accurately. But at that point they can only work at a pace five to ten times slower than a highly proficient, practiced, knowledgeable and skilled maker such as myself, and they also make a mass of other errors, particularly decision making, technical choice and task management errors.
The early 'up close and dirty' experience with hand tools and wood serve up invaluable lessons for the future-- the knowledge transfers to machine woodworking along with a better understanding of how wood behaves when it is cut, shaped, manipulated, and formed.
I've never taken on a student from school with a GCSE in Resistant Materials that really knows how to use any piece of woodworking equipment. Some have experienced very limited exposure to a few hand tools for instance, but they can't really use them. However, if they are truly keen to learn they have every opportunity to do so, and many on the course I run soon develop real skill and ability in both hand woodworking and machine woodworking along with a pile of other skills in related areas, eg, AutoCAD, design techniques and presentation, timber technology, history, etc. Slainte.