jimcross
Active Member
Peter - Good to hear from you again. Agree with everything you say, but I'm afraid most people to-day can't grasp that 'Certificate 3 in Basket Weaving" is not a vital pre-requisite, to being able to do virtually anything. I'm not blaming them, or even critisising. They have known nothing else. It has apparently the way things have always been done.
Main problem with formal qualifications, even if unwittingly, is that along with being taught what can be done, you are taught ( by implication ) that which cannot be done. There is a border drawn around existing knowledge, which is hard to break through.
Probably most of the innovations over time, are made by intelligent people, not constrained by taught knowledge of what 'can't be done.'
There was a time, especially with coaches, in all sports, when those who were good naturally floated to the top, and they were in demand for their ability to teach. Nobody had any doubts who they were, it was self-evident.
They weren't necessessarily great players - just great teachers.
Quote:- Those that can, do. Those that can't, teach. !!
Main problem with formal qualifications, even if unwittingly, is that along with being taught what can be done, you are taught ( by implication ) that which cannot be done. There is a border drawn around existing knowledge, which is hard to break through.
Probably most of the innovations over time, are made by intelligent people, not constrained by taught knowledge of what 'can't be done.'
There was a time, especially with coaches, in all sports, when those who were good naturally floated to the top, and they were in demand for their ability to teach. Nobody had any doubts who they were, it was self-evident.
They weren't necessessarily great players - just great teachers.
Quote:- Those that can, do. Those that can't, teach. !!