Academician in a sentence as a noun

His mechanic, most probably, would never become an academician.

For the ones who already live in a decent country, it only makes sense if you are very very passionate about being an academician and you should carefully question the arguments making you passionate about that. I think doing PhD is much tougher now than 1983.

If I'm an academician and I've spent 5 years coming up in my life with something innovative that would otherwise have taken a lot of time, then I should have the option to sell it to someone who is better equipped to monetize it. It's like an author hiring a publisher.

Perhaps university curriculum is "more geared" towards academician? Yes yes I'm aware the aim of CS department is not to create practical software developers, though.

Kivistik had gone for the usual academician's ace in the hole: everything is relative, it's all just differing perspectives. People had already begun to resume their little side conversations, thinking that the conflict was over, when Randy gave them all a start with: "Who decides what's bad?

That's not wrong if you are a academician by profession, but that's a serious problem if you are doing software development for a living. Much large of software development today, has got to deal with learning tools, knowing how to use a programming language to quickly turn idea to code, or fix a bug or add a feature.

That world only provides academician services. It is a very human desire to simplify complex fractal realities, and effective modeling is one of our species' advantages, but at certain scales of size, agility and complexity it breaks down.

Over the current awkward model of trying to stuff vocational training into academician-training programs that were never meant for that in the first place. A program like Digipen/Guildhall or some well executed long-term bootcamp is fairly in line with what would work best for creating productive industry contributors.

Before the web and the free dissemination of information it brought about, the average academician was more 'smarter' than the average student just by the fact that the students hadn't yet had access to the sources of information their teachers had. However, we now live in times when you can expect anybody in the society to grow to their full potential, thanks to the free web.

However, one could certainly see where a particular journal publisher holds the copyright on many excellent articles made available online for a fee having to protect their copyright from some unscrupulous academician using their paid acces to liberate those writings. And how, given the predilection of prosecutors to scare would-be defendants, automating that task might see the threat of criminal charges.

I resonated because the other day I spoke with an academician in business studies, who was researching how corporations can make more money... I argue that consumerist systems of ideas are essentially against human nature, fundamentally flawed.

So this notion that an academician isn't a proper or 'real' doctor is quite bizarre and ahistorical, It's also unnecessary to reserve the word to distinguish those in the medical fields, since they already have a number of words that refer exclusively to them, physician, surgeon, etc.

Academician definitions

noun

someone elected to honorary membership in an academy

noun

a scholar who is skilled in academic disputation

See also: schoolman

noun

an educator who works at a college or university

See also: academic