How much of what you know gets used?

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The discussion centers on the underutilization of academic knowledge in professional settings, highlighting a common experience among individuals with advanced degrees. Participants express frustration over the educational system's emphasis on memorization rather than practical application of knowledge. They argue that while analytic skills developed in school are valuable, many feel that their jobs do not fully leverage their expertise. The conversation critiques the notion that education is solely about memorizing facts, with some asserting that higher education programs encourage synthesis and application of knowledge, contrasting with experiences in lower educational levels. The importance of understanding foundational concepts, such as proofs in mathematics or programming syntax, is emphasized as essential for true mastery of a subject.
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I have a decent size reservoir of academic knowledge. I have a lot of expertise that goes unused at my job. If I changed jobs (the number of times of which is something I'm trying to minimize), I could probably use more of what I know.

That being said, there's this PhD that I work under. I have a broad idea of what he knows, and a general idea of what he does at his job. I'm nearly certain that much of what he knows also goes unused, although his job relates more strongly to his area of expertise...so he seems to be in the same boat as me, although he probably makes much much more that me, which would be a good perk.
 
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If you mean "how many facts do I use", not many. If you mean "how much of the analytic skills that were developed in school do I use", rather a lot.
 
Put me down for what Vanadium 50 said.
 
ditto
 
So why is it that the educational system teaches nothing but memorizing facts?
 
Hmoob said:
So why is it that the educational system teaches nothing but memorizing facts?

have you taken a calc class?
say proofs for example...
sure, you can memorize them, but if you fail to understand them, you miss the whole point.

or a programming class,
sure you can memorize syntax, but if you can't apply it to solve problems, your not programming.
 
Hmoob said:
So why is it that the educational system teaches nothing but memorizing facts?

That's only true if you go to a crappy school. A good program will expect you to synthesize your knowledge.
 
Hmoob said:
So why is it that the educational system teaches nothing but memorizing facts?
I can't think of any college degree program for which this is true. Certainly it may hold for high school and below, but no where else.
 
Hmoob said:
So why is it that the educational system teaches nothing but memorizing facts?

That may certainly seem to be the case with many classes. OTOH, as a student, you are, by definition, supposed to be learning a body of knowledge. It's not realistic to claim mastery of a subject without knowing the factual basis of the subject.
 

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