While I'm not surprised on what everyone is saying about checking (its the same experience at my office), something pittguy12 said got me thinking.
While it may be disheartning as a young engineer on your bosses 'feel' for structures, this is something that comes with time. I'm only five or so years into practice, but I found this feel, for me, was developed on my own time. I didn't have time during the 9 to 5 (or 8 to 6 In reality) to spend time getting a feel for things. Instead I got this on my own time, going over old lecture notes, creeping on this site, and doing my own sanity checks.
If a young engineer really wants to 'get' structures as a designer, unfortunately the time will have to be spent outside of work hours. With plug and chug, push a button, analysis programs and design sheets, the fees are no longer there for us to learn on the job. The old guys got to feel out their designs, collecting loads, using simplifications via hand methods. I really believe this was a better way to learn, but alas those days are long gone. It's quicker, faster, cheaper these days.
I don't mean to hijack the thread, or hate on pittguy's comments, but the discussion got me thinking about the ways the profession is changing. How much more can market forces squeeze out of our profession? At some point diminishing fees, and professional ethics need to come to a common point, but how we get there is a mystery to me.