Posted 2008-August-18, 18:42
One of the most important things I learned in my Engineering degree was that it was obvious within a week if my professor had gone B.Sc., M.Sc., Ph.D., postdoc, tenure-track; or whether they had actually done any real engineering in the Real World. It was also immediately clear who were the better for my knowledge of Engineering. I vowed then, that although I had planned on going into Academia (because I liked, and still like, to teach people who want to learn), I was getting some time in the trenches first.
I then found out that in Academia, teaching is something you do because it's in the contract, and not actually important either for getting hired or staying that way. I also found a Real Job and a Hobby Job that involve education, and love it.
In general, I agree that it doesn't much matter what you know, as long as you can learn; and a college degree is evidence that you can learn. It would be nice if we could focus on that in primary and secondary education rather than "our kids are getting 5% lower on the standard test of knowledge (i.e. what they know) than they are, so teach them more facts to memorize."
If you're a professional, of whatever stripe, "what you know" becomes more important, but those Legal books aren't in the office just for show, nor are the surgical procedural journals in your neuro's office.
When I go to sea, don't fear for me, Fear For The Storm -- Birdie and the Swansong (tSCoSI)