Workingman wrote:One answers directly because they have studied and the subject knowledge is already in their head.
Today, if the candidate has not use the viable resources to be able to provide at least minimal responses, then they are going to fail.
Then again, I recall in the early 90's the offices I worked in. You could see those who went on the courses and had the elevated positions. They had dozens of books on shelves at their desks. Proof that they had been "educated" to do their job. They used this as a stick to lord it over others.
Today? You never see a book. In fact a shelf of books is a detractor because if you haven't embraced the "global library" of the Internet then you are a dinosaur and are no use to the management.
Things have changed dramatically and the internet and AI are a core part of the job. If we had no internet I might as well take the day off. Everything I do is there, including all my documents which are on the company sharepoint. I work remote and I do all my meetings remote. The solution we are delivering is a cloud solutions, even were I in the office in Canada I could not work without the Internet.
Once I have access to the internet my ability to deliver is enhanced. Much more so than someone who stored a whole bunch of facts in their head and then trot them out one after the other. Facts which age extremely rapidly.
There was a time when I could have given you most of the functions from Clipper from memory. It is now a total waste of neurons and has been "flushed". Nobody uses Clipper any more (well nearly nobody, I saw a job advertised a few weeks ago), it is a DOS programming language with an xBase back end.
The smart management knows that the candidate will have skill and knowledge to a level which allows the remaining information to be researched as the job is being done.
The smart candidate will give a blend of core knowledge followed by a set or resource locations to be used to deliver the job and the way in which they will use those resources to get the job done.
The world has moved on. Education? Not so much.