Many training programs and often schools focus on just a skill or a kind of work competency. That's only half the equation.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Training is a universal right. It's not just targeted at those with the worst skill levels.
One may have broad or narrow talents, but only education renders them useful. Schools set up to train people will develop the intelligence of those who have it and end the stupidity of those who do not, providing a specialty to those who have narrow talent and broad knowledge to those with all-around ability.
You learn more doing than doing training.
We have a training period; we have certain guidelines and structure. You can't hire talented people and stifle them. That's not the way it works anymore.
Developing skills is as important as training. A larger effort is needed to create a skilled workforce with employment potential.
I think it is inevitable that people program poorly. Training will not substantially help matters. We have to learn to live with it.
The so-called skills gap is really a gap in education, and that affects all of us.
You can work really hard, but if you're not training in the right way you're not going to improve and get to the level that you want to.
It's all about training smart.
It's all to do with the training: you can do a lot if you're properly trained.