On Sat, 10 Mar 2007 12:34:23 -0500, "Daniel P. B. Smith" wikipedia2006@dpbsmith.com wrote:
Academic credentials are easily verified, represent disinterested third-party testimony, and are an imprecise but _valid_ indicator that the degree-holder had at one point in one's life mastered a certain body of knowledge for long enough to pass an exam.
Up to a point. You'll also find that degree holders tend in the main to be better versed in the methodology of research and citation, although that can certainly be learned.
Looking at the average CVG article, I'd say that comp-sci students would be an exception to that :o)
Guy (JzG)