ANSWERS: 20
-
...both...every experience, relationship, adventure teaches us something...I find it is better not to judge "better or worse" rather...how does this experience take me to the next step of my life.....
-
School is good, But OJT has many benefits that you are not taught in school.
-
A well rounded person learns from many sources. School can only teach you so much.
-
In my 30+ years of working, on the job. I've seen college graduates become completely confused by simple tasks.
-
Depends on what you're learning. I wouldn't want a want-to-be doctor who is learning on the job as he goes... I think you need both.
-
I don't think it's a question of which is better. School provides the technical knowledge required to perform the job, but the employer will train or teach employees to perform the job to THEIR standard, DESPITE what is taught in school.
-
Both, school teaches how to, job teaches when to :):)
-
both.. a little from school and later you master it from the job, hands on experience
-
both OTJ only teaches one employees procedures/equiptment If you have certifications in the electric and mechanical field you can work in any industry OTJ may teach you the plastics industry, but you knowledge in pretty much limited to that area
-
It's good to learn from both, but I prefer to learn on the job... Pressures me to learn faster, and it seems to stick with me better if I actually have to use those skills. I like practical application.
-
Of course, what you need to know for a particular job is best learned doing the job itself, however you need to know certain things to get said job which is what school is for... All in all, I think a good balance of both is what you really need to succeed. :)
-
From my experience...both.
-
Most good jobs require certain schooling just to get in the door. Then you have to learn on the job. +5
-
From school in the beginning, but on the job teaches you so much more. +5
-
I learn better from On The Job Training.
-
the job
-
It is better to learn from a school first and then go practice on the job. Both are valuable.
-
Fact from fiction, truth from diction. That would all depend on the complexity of the job. Brain surgery you don't want to have someone learning as they go. Or engineering. But certain job, auto mechanics, plumbing etc you can learn more efficient by job training, because you are actually doing it so to see how it all comes together is not as abstract as reading in from a text book. And to me I would thik it also helps in retaining the knowledge. So the better from school or the job comes down to the job.
-
People learn from experiences, not textbooks.
-
Definitely on the job. You will forget over 95% of what you learn in school, and you usually learn from people who know what to say, but not what to do.
Copyright 2023, Wired Ivy, LLC