Mollygo
Elegran @ Today 11:49 and further posts.
Very well put.
Education is also the ability to apply and use what you have learnt
You don’t need to do that or retain everything you learn, e.g. I learnt how to patch holes in my car with fibreglass patches and coating, a necessary skill, but one I no longer need.
Experience is a great teacher, but you have to have the opportunities to gain that experience.
The infamous job hunting feedback “We need someone with more experience.” highlights the difficulty we sometimes face in trying to learn by experience.
I think savvy employers can spot people with potential, even if they don't have experience. My son, who has a First in Politics and Economics and Masters, was snapped up by a company and has had two promotions in a year. When he told me that he had a job and I asked him what it was, he admitted he didn't really know what he was going to be doing. To say I was little concerned would be an understatement, but the company has a brilliant trainee/mentoring scheme in place and it's obvious now that he had the skills they needed to fill a gap. The skills have very little to do with the actual content of any of his courses, but he developed them as he was studying. The company is now paying for him to do a professional qualification and my concerns have evaporated.
Meanwhile, my son and I have silly conversations in German and Latin (his Latin is better than mine, but we both know enough to make puns), discuss history (usually Anglo Saxons or Corn Laws) and we both enjoy conversations with my son-in-law about genetics - none of which is of any financial gain to us. Other people discuss soaps or celebs or football or whatever floats their particular boats. That's all part of a wider topic known as "education" (IMO).