I was once a long time ago assigned an EE student intern to take on some rather mundane tasks during a period of heavy workload. I had her doing some basic schematic drafting of 120VAC motor control circuit designs that I would scratch out on napkins and such. She was actually more of a hindrance than a help because I had to keep showing her things I would have thought were basic electrical drafting 101 stuff (she was about to graduate). After a few weeks I was doing a performance review for her and she said she was struggling to understand all of my series-parallel RC networks. "What?" I said?. She was interpreting my N.O. contact symbols as capacitors and N.C. symbols as varistors. I was shocked and said "Aren't you a 4th year EE student?" She responded "Well yes, but I'm EE/CS, so I don't know much about this high voltage stuff. Please don't tell the boss, I really need this job." High voltage to her was 120VAC. She said they didn't cover "power" in any of her classes. The way the degree programs were at that time, and probably still are in many cases, her sheepskin would have said "Bachelors Degree in Electrical Engineering" without qualification, but she was totally unqualified to work in any branch of EE that dealt with "high voltages" of 120VAC and above.
I'm just sayin...
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— Kilgore Trout (via Kurt Vonnegut)
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