nanog mailing list archives

Re: certification


From: Stephen Satchell <list () satchell net>
Date: Sun, 07 Jun 2015 10:32:35 -0700

On 06/07/2015 09:28 AM, Randy Bush wrote:
i assume, but have zero actual knowledge/experience, that certification
courses/programs actually cover all the corners and minutiae of a subject
such as is-is.  so you come out knowing all the options and details, 42%
of which you will use; or maybe 24% if you are parsimonious.

while i no longer have spare room in my head for a lot of stuff i will
not use, having some clue about what's outside my current practice zone
would be useful.  if i was young and had spare brain cells and time, i
might read through the course ware and do some playing in the lab.  but
you can't move packets on pieces of paper.

Putting on my "professor's kid" hat: Education is *supposed* to be about learning how to find answers when you need them. How to understand what you find. Yes, there are a number of basic things you need to do "by rote" and from memory (especially "muscle memory"), but when you run into the one-percent cases, you need to know where to look and how to apply what your search turns up.

"[I do not] carry such information in my mind since it is readily available in books. ...The value of a college education is not the learning of many facts but the training of the mind to think."
    -- Albert Einstein


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