Yeah, there were some flaws in that intro post.
Still, conservatives do in fact feel that education, especially at the college level, is some sort of liberal conspiracy. The number of liberal professors that go on to be elected as democrat representives (at least two presidents served as university professors prior [Obama taught Constitutional Law, and Wilson was a College Dean], with probably more that I'm forgetting) sort of adds to the theory, accurate or not. Needless to say, high school educations in rural conservative locations tend to be conservative indocrination also.
More to the point, I should not have used the term grind, but rather should have pointed out that the skill is simply uninteresting and fails to deliver anything meaningful in comparison to other skills.
I agree that Teaching should be stackable (and perhaps multiplicative) with the other knowledge skills. In a way, the interrogation process is "teaching" among other things.
For example: "The reduction of pollution admissions by businesses not only is vital to protect the environment, but also saves businesses money. We must act quickly, as China is quickly outpacing our environmental protection efforts, and history teaches us that once a nation falls behind in a technological race, it takes significantly more effore to catch up." The argument draws upon Teaching, Business, and Science, and those three areas build a stronger argument than any one individual area.
As I am not a programmer, I'm not going to propose any particular formula. However, the assessment of teaching makes sense.