This applies to engineering labs, too, which sometimes do a better job of teaching the “hubris leading to downfall” trope than some literature departments. Our permanent staff knew everything inside and out, and worked there for decades with little incident. The undergraduates had a semester class to hammer in safety rules, and so my subsequent robot design project only left me with a tiny scar from when I stupidly assumed a rule wouldn’t apply. The graduate students were expected to already know what they were doing, and during my senior year one lost a thumb when that expectation proved false.
This applies to engineering labs, too, which sometimes do a better job of teaching the “hubris leading to downfall” trope than some literature departments. Our permanent staff knew everything inside and out, and worked there for decades with little incident. The undergraduates had a semester class to hammer in safety rules, and so my subsequent robot design project only left me with a tiny scar from when I stupidly assumed a rule wouldn’t apply. The graduate students were expected to already know what they were doing, and during my senior year one lost a thumb when that expectation proved false.