I would argue a different approach, Bobfromoh. It makes no sense to send someone off to do FE without at least a gradual build up of that person's knowledge of FE theory (university training before doing FE is better, OJT if you have to. Incidentally, I have taken 3 FE courses at universities, all required actual modeling with FE software, so you couldn't say that my theory was completely disconnected from the application, even if the applications were simplified) because so much of the modeling and the results interpretation is tied to the formulation of whatever FE software you are using. For instance, if you know the theory well, you would never blindly model a rubber in your FE model with a linear elastic material with Poisson ratio=PR=0.4999999 if you are using h-element software like Ansys or ADINA (interestingly you could get away with such a high PR with p-version software), because you'd end up with the familiar 'element locking.' If you had little or no knowledge of FE theory, you would have no idea that the stiffness matrix "K" in Ku=f has terms like (1-2*PR) in the denominators, and therefore you'd be at a loss to explain such strange behavior as you see with element locking; in fact, you might just take the results as they are without questioning them. You might say that this an experience problem, while I might argue that it's a problem of ignorance of the FE formulation.
There are so many possible sources of error and many ways you learn to reduce the magnitudes of those errors--those you learn in both university training and OJT; the job gives you far too little time to get the theory, university training gives you far too little time to get the practical experience; with one or the other, you are half a FE analyst--with both, you can make a good FE analyst.
I won't forget to mention the obvious--far more important than knowledge of FE theory is knowledge of elasticity (or nonlinear material if that's what you are modeling) theory, IMO. I find the most difficult part of the FE model is most often specifying boundary constraints; a thorough knowledge elasticity (not just strength of materials) is vital to understanding how to properly specify boundary constraints and, in turn, developing better FE models.