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#10
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Dwight Stewart wrote: "N2EY" wrote: "Knowledge" in this context really means anything that can be learned and known consciously by a person. There are at least three different kinds of knowledge - facts, concepts and skills. Is there significant knowledge in using a hammer skillfully? Dwight your ignorance is showing again--OF COURSE there is! Facts are concrete pieces of information, and are learned by pure memorization. "1 plus 1 equals 2 in base 10" is an arithmetic fact. A person can know all sorts of facts with no understanding of what they mean. Concepts are understandings of how things work and what they mean. Such as the concept of addition, which requires understanding. Of course without facts, very little can be done with pure concepts. (snip) Most of what is on the written test is facts. The Morse test is almost pure skill. Concepts get the short end. I'm not sure I can fully agree with that since the written tests do require at least rudimentary understanding of scientific concepts like radio waves, RF exposure, atmospheric affects on radio waves, and so on (all found in even college level science textbooks, including Ohm's Law). That would true be if one bothered to actually learn the background information on the questions that are in the pool. Most don't, since the objective is to pass the test and get the license. Learning is not a requirement. |