chippy1970":2djqbmb3 said:
Smudger":2djqbmb3 said:
chippy1970":2djqbmb3 said:
CNC Paul":2djqbmb3 said:
You know what they say "those who can
DO and those who cant
TEACH"
I've always been unimpressed when people trot out that old cliché.
Ever tried it?
No I have not tried it and I dont want to thanks.
Sorry Smudger did I touch a nerve ? :roll:
Its not my saying and if you read on I did say not all my lecturers were bad but all in all I learnt more on site from working.
All lecturers should be made to go out in the real world every now and then to catch up on the latest methods and materials.
What you did was insult me and everyone in my (ex) profession. I love the 'did I touch a nerve' comment as well. With rolling eyes. How nice. Implies, of course, that I am an incompetent, too.
I realise that it's not 'your saying' - I do have at least a basic education. But then what else do I know? You don't have the faintest idea. How would you feel if I was to simply assume that everyone in your chosen profession was unskilled, incompetent, a failure? I suspect you'd be pretty peed off with such a broad and unthinking stereotype.
Has it occurred to you that perhaps those lecturers for whom you had such contempt actually had good knowledge - perhaps not the building site nous you value so much - but were in fact the repository of skills and knowledge which are necessary for trades to continue through time?
Have you also considered that perhaps they knew more than you did, and you didn't understand what they were trying to teach you? Perhaps it was an attitude problem, I don't know, I wasn't there. I can't judge other people at a distance, can I? But, of course, you can.
You've never tried it, and don't want to. I see. Yet someone took the trouble to teach you to read (if not punctuate), at least. Perhaps you should find that person and try your little saying (actually George Bernard Shaw's) to her face.