51吃瓜

Quality and uselessness

Published on
四月 24, 1998
Last updated
五月 27, 2015

It is good to find Peter Mann ("Trust to your tacit knowledge", Research, THES, April 17) distinguishing between "explicit knowledge" and "tacit knowledge"; but why stop there?

It is important, too, to identify "conceptual knowledge". Indeed, the ultimate aim of research is usually "conceptual development and improved understanding". Tacit knowledge, or "know-how", which (like common sense and best practice) is acquired through successful experiences, and it certainly "pervades the shop floor"; but it is "understanding" that underpins unprecedented innovations, enables us to get them right and keeps industry ahead.

The distinctions between "factual knowledge", "know-how" and "understanding" are important in education, too, because the appropriate teaching methods are different in each case.

John Sparkes Hemel Hempstead

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