Reminds me of a girl I used to work with in technical support. She had a CISCO qualification & didn't know what a subnet mask was. I'm not sure if she even knew what an IP address was, either.:bang:After a year and a half in my class theres still a couple who dont know what an f/stop is, its shocking.
Don't blame the University for the lack of technical knowledge.
And don't blame the University for producing theory based photographers. That's what going to Uni is for, for putting some ideas behind your work, and doing so in a manner that doesn't constitute shallowness and lack of insight.
Our University is very technical based, with a very in depth theory aspect that is hard to keep up with.
The only thing is, the fundementals are lost. The film side isn't important anymore in industry.
But in my opinion, the process of film, the enjoyment of using it, and printing it, are paramount to the photographic field, and without that as a base of your knowledge, you're....kinda missing out.
Which is why I had to teach myself.
But yeah, it's a per student basis - the Uni's will offer as much or as little as you wish to take from them, so the idea that the most competent and strong will rise to the top rings very, very true.
Over the last 4 years I have had 5 students work part time for me. Only 2 of the 5 had any clue of what Aperture is or how it is controlled. They had no idea that you can control your shutter speed by changing F. stops.

I might be tempted also. I was never any good at creating 'art' either - it seems if you're good at logic, then artistic creativity is very difficult. The inverse would logically be true also......I'd be tempted by doing a qualification in photography if it was mostly technical and business based but I'm really not good at the "soft" more arty side of things.

Salisbury School of photography. We have 30 years at the top of the art schools. very veyr good course i enjoy it immensely and it is very analogue based.out of interest feeb, what is your colledge? or anyones for that matter! alma marter fight!
) i must look it up! since I am thinking of doing such a course!Good postI don't get why you all expect the course to hand everything to you on a plate- universities are not school classrooms- you are expected to go out and research and learn for yourselves as well as spending time critiquing work and in discussion with tutors. Google/forums/flickr can teach the technical side easily, while the course concentrates on the theory and feedback the internet can't give.