[[quoteright:300:[[Webcomic/ExterminatusNow https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/wildfire_9587.jpg]]]]
[[caption-width-right:300:They don't call her Wildfire for her surgical precision.]]

-> ''"Old age and treachery will beat youth and skill every time."''
-->-- '''Proverb'''

You get a young character who is pretty awesome at what they do. This person out-performs the grizzled veterans at nearly everything, whether it's bringing down the MonsterOfTheWeek, commanding the RedshirtArmy into battle, or solving the murder. A few years older and they will be a total badass.

There's just one problem: [[NaiveNewcomer their complete lack of real-world experience]].

This character's talents may serve them well in a professional context, but they still find themselves running into trouble by doing things the superior experience of their less talented predecessors would tell them to avoid. This is often exacerbated by arrogance and {{Pride}} from the rookie who finds themselves outperforming people who have made kicking ass their career. Sometimes they will have a sense of responsibility to use their new abilities to the fullest (not having the patience and foresight more experienced characters have in knowing you can't help anyone if you are dead, of course).

Many, many heroes start off this way. TheHero often starts off as the least experienced member of the FiveManBand, giving them room to grow as a character while tending to ultimately be the most powerful member of their team. Main characters in general have a nasty habit of going beyond their experience levels and relying on raw talent and bravado, which frequently gets the rest of the group into trouble as well. In particularly tragic circumstances, such impetuosity can get a character or their allies killed, with all the emotional torque and lessons about the fragility of youth and the dangers of overestimating talents. It's a frequent source of the MentorOccupationalHazard.

{{Kid Hero}}es, such as {{Young Gun}}s, KidSamurai, and {{Cute Bruiser}}s, can find themselves falling into this. Add HotBlooded into the mix and you're asking for impetuosity combined with incompetence. In a military setting, this can be one of the defining traits of EnsignNewbie.

This trope is very closely related to IdiotHero, to the point where the two tropes look identical at first glance. There is a subtle difference however. While IdiotHero refers to a character who is genuinely intellectually challenged but whose other strengths (Heroism, personality and morality) make them a hero, characters of this trope may be very intelligent, possibly even geniuses, but they don't have enough experience, both in life and in their chosen fields, to make the best of that talent. It's a subtle difference, but an important one. However, an IdiotHero can also be Skilled But Naive if their usual line of work tends to rely more on instinct and moral certainty than on abstract intelligence, and naturally the lack of intelligence will tend to exacerbate their naïveté.

If they do evolve, they are rather malleable. A bad shock may send them into themselves, creating a ZenSurvivor or KnightInSourArmor, a character who feels cynically about issues but still can't stop the bold idealistic tendencies from showing through when the chips are down. Or constant steady success may create a full-on ActionHero or AllLovingHero. They can easily become a FutureBadass in cases of SacrificialLion or an earlier DownerEnding where this character survives. Compare InnocentProdigy. See also WellTrainedButInexperienced, a character that is well trained but has little to no actual combat experience.

Note that to fit this trope characters have to be:

1) Just as powerful or more powerful than more experienced characters.

OR

2) Noticeably remarkable in their skills for their experience level.

AND

3) Naïve when it comes to comprehending the world around them, subtle meanings of things, and the like. (These characters are likely to be {{Wide Eyed Idealist}}s and believe in HonorBeforeReason. They are excellent candidates for believing in BlackAndWhiteMorality in a more realistic setting where shades of grey are the norm.)

OR ALTERNATIVELY

4) While being excellent technical fighters and academically very capable at what they do, they are vulnerable to tactical oversights that only a more experienced character could possibly pick up on.

----
!!Examples:

[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
* Tamaki of ''Manga/BambooBlade''. Absolute prodigy at swordplay, hopelessly naïve in other situations.
* Sensei from ''Manga/{{Barakamon}}''. While a genius in calligraphy, lacks social skills and gets easily flustered when interacting with others, accidentally saying that his piece for a contest was a test piece and forcing him to come up with a new one at the last minute. Similarly, he constantly acts childish, gets outsmarted by 6 year olds in social interactions and has no idea about romance. Still he helps his students win calligraphy contests and always places high in them.
* Shierke from ''Manga/{{Berserk}}'' is a very skilled witch (and arguably the most useful character to have in a fight after [[PowerTrio the main three]]), but her youth and relative inexperience leads her to overestimate her abilities and make several ultimately avoidable mistakes due to recklessness.
* ''Manga/{{Bleach}}'': It might surprise you to know that [[CloudCuckoolander Orihime]] is actually a theoretically superlative fighter; she's a black-belt martial artists, and her spiritual powers allow her to block any attack, heal any injury, and potentially OneHitKill any opponent. She still struggles in battle and has to be protected because for all her power, she's still an ActualPacifist high school student, not a BloodKnight like Ichigo or a trained warrior like the Gotei 13. She spends most of the series working to overcome her own hesitance in battle so she can stop being TheLoad.
* Priscilla from ''Manga/{{Claymore}}'' fits this with tragic consequences. She hadn't been on the job for long before she was promoted to number two in the organization, and she was truly skilled at what she did. However, her big flaw was that she lacked experience and tended to [[LawfulStupid see everything in black and white]], even when fighting [[AlwaysChaoticEvil yoma.]] Both Teresa, who she was hunting, and Illena, who was really in control of the entire assassination task force (albeit it was technically Priscilla since she outranked her), called Priscilla out on her naïveté, but seeing that Priscilla was also emotionally unstable do to her traumatic past - you can guess [[SuperpowerMeltdown where everything eventually led to.]]
* ''Literature/TheDevilIsAPartTimer'': Emilia Justina/Emi Yusa is very powerful and charismatic, but is genuinely shocked to discover that the Church of Ente Isla, which she had been fighting for her entire life, is {{corrupt|Church}}; her friends, Albert and Emeralda, are not too surprised to discover this themselves. Furthermore, she is unaware that Suzuno is another Ente Isla native, something that Maou and his group [[EverybodyKnewAlready knew from the minute she saw them]], until Suzuno explicitly told her so to her face; Suzuno herself is absolutely ''shocked'' that Emi didn't figure it out herself.
* Goku from ''Manga/DragonBall'' spent most of his childhood on his own after his adoptive father died, so at the start he lacks even the most basic skills, such as personal hygiene, maths, social skills and the like... he gets better along the story but remains naïve enough to fall for the oldest and dumbest tricks in the book (for example, he's fooled when Raditz tells an obvious lie, and is shocked that he would lie)... he's also a powerhouse of brute strength, agility and endurance AND he's a genius in all things related to martial arts. Clearly SacrificedBasicSkillForAwesomeTraining. It's even [[InvokedTrope Invoked]] during the 21st World Martial Arts Tournament. At one point during his fight with Goku, [[PaperThinDisguise Jackie Chun]] switches to [[DrunkenBoxing Drunken Fist]] ''specifically because'' Goku is too young to understand how a drunk person moves, giving Jackie an edge (albeit temporarily).
* In ''Manga/{{Gamma}}'', Blue Train isn't just a LightningBruiser, but also a GadgeteerGenius who designed a costume that enables him to use his superpowers to his full potential, as well as [[BoringButPractical a voice changer to disguise his voice while in costume]]. Unfortunately, he's a rather gullible hero who firmly believes in ThouShaltNotKill to the point of it being a fault, so he's rather ineffective until he's forced to realize that hesitating against a dangerous villain likely cost many innocent people their lives.
* Pick a ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'' protagonist. [[Anime/MobileSuitGundam Amuro]], [[Anime/MobileSuitZetaGundam Kamille]], [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeed Kira]], [[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSeedDestiny Shinn]], even the supposedly cynical [[Anime/MobileSuitGundam00 Setsuna]] all start out pretty naïve. Then they get caught up in the war and, in one way or another, all break. In Shinn's case, the clever BigBad exploits this, manipulating him into becoming one of the CoDragons without Shinn even realizing it until the end.
* ''Manga/HajimeNoIppo'':
** Woli is absolutely ''made'' of this trope. That's what you get from being a divine boxing genius who got the Indonesian title after ''three fights''. He's a happy-go-lucky monkey boy who makes stupid moves such as talking to his opponent during the match and eating bananas before the match, yet is basically [[GameBreaker the Takamura]] of feather-weight in terms of natural talent and fighting instincts. The only reason he lost against Ippo was due to lack of experience. Even Coach Kamogawa admits that Ippo couldn't win against a Woli with more boxing experience.
** Itagaki Manabu is a good example as well, albeit not as extreme as Woli.
* Mizuki from ''Manga/KamisamaKiss'' knows quite a bit of magic and is far tougher and stronger than any ordinary human. However, he has lived a very sheltered life and when he is suddenly dropped into modern day Tokyo it really shows.
* Shichika of ''Literature/{{Katanagatari}}'': He's spent his entire life on a remote island cut off from civilization with only his sister and his father. He can't even tell other humans apart from each other by sight alone. While he did receive 20 years of training in Kyotoryuu, a powerful fighting style that is essentially "swordsmanship without a sword", he lacks actual battle experience. This actually cost him a quick victory in Episode 2 when he was caught off guard by his opponent's sword pressure and inadvertently held back on what would have been a decisive blow. Fortunately he had a backup plan in that case.
* Teana Landstar of ''Franchise/LyricalNanoha'' fame not only possesses shooting magic that doesn't have all that much raw power, but can be devastating if properly aimed, as well as illusion magic. Unfortunately, she's desperate to prove herself in order to show the Bureau that her family's magic isn't useless, and feels outclassed by those with raw power like Subaru, talent like Erio (who achieved B rank at a younger age and earlier than she did) and rare skills like Caro's SummonMagic. Her CharacterDevelopment is chiefly about getting over herself and learning to be a team player.
* Dr. Tenma in ''Manga/{{Monster}}''. He's a surgical prodigy and an excellent doctor in general, but he's completely oblivious about Dr. Heinemann's political games, and that costs him the life of a patient he could have saved. After that, he gets better and evolves into an AllLovingHero.
* ''Manga/MyHeroAcademia'' features a large cast of young heroes-in-training, so this comes up from time to time, but particularly in the case of Momo Yaoyorozu early on. Gifted with the incredibly versatile ability to create any non-living object she can envision and the genius-level intellect required to use it quickly, she nevertheless struggled during the Sports Festival arc. Part of it was that she lacked the confidence to assert herself during team activities, and when the time came for her to partake in one-on-one combat, she spent so much time thinking about how to counter her opponent that she got pushed out of the ring before she could enact a strategy. Her CharacterDevelopment in subsequent arcs has revolved around addressing these weaknesses.
* ''Manga/{{Naruto}}'':
** Itachi Uchiha claims that his younger brother is one of these [[spoiler: (Hence the manipulations of Orochimaru, Madara/Tobi and to some extent Itachi himself.)]]
** Sakura had some of these tendencies as well; despite having excellent chakra control, and potential for genjutsu, she had even less fighting experience than Naruto, and tended to be useless in fights for a good chunk of the series.
** [[spoiler:The 1st Hokage is considered to be this by his younger brother, the 2nd. While Hashirama is unquestionably one of the most powerful shinobi to ever live, he had the rather naïve idea that all of the clans (who had spent generations killing each other) would all of a sudden get along after he founded the village. Likewise he distributed the tailed beasts among the ninja villages, hoping that this would balance things out and prevent war. It didn't.]]
** Nagato. As [[spoiler:Pain, he is/was an indomitably powerful ninja, but his ultimate goal was to end all war with the threat of the use of an incredibly powerful weapon. This sentiment has been expressed by many inventors in the past, who believed that the weapon they created would be devastating enough to end war forever (the Gatling gun and dynamite to name two) and without exception they have been sadly mistaken.]]
** [[spoiler:The legendary Sage of the Six Paths seems to have been this during his life as well. He was probably the strongest ninja in history (other than [[PhysicalGod his mother]]). Even so, he honestly didn't think people would abuse the powerful techniques he passed down to them, and was surprised that his older son became resentful when he named the younger his successor.]]
* Negi Springfield from ''Manga/NegimaMagisterNegiMagi'', a highly talented mage who at 10 years old has the sort of power and skill that most don't get even after decades of study and training...but he's still a ten year old and he thinks like one. As a result, a good chunk of his training involves getting the naïveté beaten out of him.
* ''Manga/OnePiece'':
** Luffy is a strong and determined character who is made of rubber... who also goes "WOOOOOOOW" at every little thing along with Chopper, and who lacks common sense in many (most) occasions... like Goku above, he also gets better, sorta, as the story progresses.
** The Zou arc introduces Carrot, a LittleBitBeastly young rabbit girl who is an acknowledged warrior in her homeland but has no idea of anything outside of it. While even Chopper and Luffy understand what a big deal going to sea is, Carrot thought stowing away on the Thousand Sunny to join a rescue mission would be a simple day trip and is amazed that the trip to their destination would take several days.
* For all his cynical pragmatism and perfect social control within his normal sphere of influence, Kyouya Ootori from ''Anime/OuranHighSchoolHostClub'' shows signs of being just as much of a teenage ShelteredAristocrat behind those StoicSpectacles as all the other students except Haruhi. Shows up most prominently in his DayInTheLimelight episode, "Kyouya's Day Out!", and some of the more Kyouya-focused manga arcs that never made it into the anime.
* ''Manga/ThePrinceOfTennis'': Kabaji Munehiro is one of the most formidable players due to his PowerCopying abilities coupled his physical power. However, he often lacks experience with the techniques he copies from opponents, which allow both [[UnskilledButStrong Kawamura]] and Tezuka to exploit this.
* Shinji Ikari in ''Anime/RebuildOfEvangelion''. He's shortly established as the most competent and skilled EVA pilot, beating out the much-more-experienced Asuka while in an EVA he's unfamiliar with, but [[spoiler:is easily manipulated by Gendo into accomplishing his goals and triggering a ''Fourth'' Impact.]]
* ''Literature/RebuildWorld'':
** This is how Reina is introduced, being completely naïve about how her lambasting fellow hunters could get her into a fight with them, which is called out with BrutalHonesty by Akira. Meanwhile, he's actually really impressed with her fighting skill. But she still falls for a WoundedGazelleGambit after that, and it takes a while for her to stop being WillfullyWeak by wearing cheaper armor than she can afford simply to prove herself. Reina eventually [[CharacterDevelopment grows out of this]] and into a GuileHero.
** TheRival Katsuya, on the other hand, despite being talented, never seems to learn. He just keeps on repeating the same mistakes, getting his subordinates killed, and being easily manipulated (especially if said lies make Akira, the one he's a GreenEyedMonster of, look bad).
* All of the Heroes start out as this in ''Literature/TheRisingOfTheShieldHero''. Naofumi sees the truth after he is falsely accused while it takes the other three for the Church to try to kill them before they realize something is up.
* ''Anime/RomeoXJuliet'': Juliet, oh Juliet. You're a total BadassAdorable, but you should've known better than falling for the cute guy in a CoolHorse...
* This trope is addressed in ''Anime/SamuraiChamploo'': One of Jin's early opponents, Inuyaka, notes that while he's a very skilled swordsman, he hasn't had enough outside experience to fight him in an unfamiliar environment, as he's spent his entire life training in a dojo. (By contrast, his counterpart Mugen wouldn't know formal fighting if he was presented with an instruction manual.)
* ''Anime/SonicX'': While an exceptionally skilled fighter, a cunning TrapMaster on his home turf, and possessing ancient knowledge not known to many, Knuckles also lacks social tact and is SuperGullible to the point of repeatedly falling for Eggman's BlatantLies and [[FalselyReformedVillain claims of changing his ways]]; while he grew up believing in honesty and the inherit goodness of people, he can't seem to comprehend that with Eggman, [[GoodCannotComprehendEvil there's just no "good" to see]].
* In ''Literature/VioletEvergarden'', this was Violet's initial problem when it came to writing letters as noted by the Doll teacher. She was the only one in her class to attain perfect grades in vocabulary and grammar, as well as having excellent typing skills, but Violet simply lacked the social skills to accurately decipher a person's true letter and express it properly in a letter.
* Haqua du Lot Herminium of ''Manga/TheWorldGodOnlyKnows'' was a brilliant student, whose hard work and talent were so undeniable that she broke through the glass ceiling and became the first student from a lower-class family to ever be awarded the [[SinisterScythe Scythe of Testament]], signifying her place at the top of her class. Once put in the field, however, she causes trouble by losing patience with her human partner, due to her need to prove herself. Then, when [[TheRemnant Vintage]] rears its head, she proves to be woefully naïve when it comes to reading people, requiring the help of her more worldly acquaintances on numerous occasions.
* Azuma Kazuma of ''Manga/YakitateJapan''. He's an excellent baker (and is later to be ''incredibly'' good at math), but has little experience due to growing up in a remote rural area. He didn't even know what nan bread was, [[ItsBeenDone "inventing" it himself without realizing it had already been invented.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Comic Books]]
* ''ComicBook/SonicTheHedgehogArchieComics'': Silver is good with [[PsychicPowers his powers]] and fighting, but not so good at getting facts and interacting with people. He's trying to SetRightWhatOnceWentWrong by hunting down and stopping a traitor in the Freedom Fighters, but he's terrible at ''identifying'' said traitor and keeps running off half-cocked with little-to-no evidence; it takes him getting it wrong ''[[RuleOfThree three times]]'' and pushing Sonic to the point he [[RageBreakingPoint physically assaults him]] for Silver to realize he's going about trying to find the traitor the wrong way.
* In a huge departure from her original characterization where she was savvy and skilled and easily outsmarted a con artist in her [[ComicBook/SensationComics first foray off Paradise Island]] in George Perez's reboot of ComicBook/WonderWoman (''[[ComicBook/WonderWoman1987 Wonder Woman Vol. 2]]'') he mixed this with GoodCannotComprehendEvil when Diana was fresh off Themiscyra. In her late teens, she had been endowed with great intelligence, but she struggled with the concept of Barbara Minerva being deceptive and wanting to steal her lasso, or Myndi Mayer unable to break her cocaine addiction, leading to her drug-induced suicide. Those things were utterly foreign to her, though they helped her become OlderAndWiser.
* The titular character from the ComicBook/LuckyLuke album ''The Tenderfoot'' is an English gentleman who inherited a ranch in the American West from his RemittanceMan uncle. The comedy in the album mostly comes from the tenderfoot's effortless ability to outdo the rough-and-tumble cowboys at their own games (He was, among other things, school boxing champion at Oxbridge, an excellent equestrian and marksman due to his interest in hunting, and effectively inured to hardship after growing up in a BoardingSchoolOfHorrors) and his UpperClassTwit mannerisms.
* ComicBook/UltimateMarvel
** ''ComicBook/UltimateSpiderMan'' are examples, both Peter Parker and [[Characters/MarvelComicsMilesMorales Miles Morales]]. They have a defined sense of good and evil and no accountability, and were just teenagers. The politics behind what SHIELD and ComicBook/TheUltimates do and don't do is usually news to them. They also frequently fall into DestructiveSaviour mode, and SHIELD has to clean up behind them.
** ''ComicBook/AllNewUltimates'': The new team is not exactly sure how to work as a team in the beginning as they no longer have SHIELD or government backing since SHIELD was shut down. They have only worked together twice prior to becoming an official team and both situations pail in comparison to what they face as a formal team.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Fan Works]]
* ''Fanfic/ChildOfTheStorm'':
** Uhtred is initially this; he's a talented enough young warrior to be [[WarGod Sif's]] protege, and he's not only unusually strong, but very fast for his size. He's initially facing Harry, who is barely trained, but a CombatPragmatist who's relatively experienced in life or death fights, and quite willing to do something ridiculous to win, and practised at pushing through his already ludicrous pain threshold. Guess who wins (though it is noted that it's not exactly a trick Uhtred will fall for twice).
** Hermione - she's got a vast and encyclopaedic knowledge of magic, along with many other subjects, and later develops exceptionally powerful chaos magic. However, she simply doesn't have the kind of reflexes or combat mentality that Harry does, and is unfortunately prone to assuming that MagicAIsMagicA (which with chaos magic it is very much not). However, when they end up psychically linked for a battle (or rather, [[spoiler: she literally ends up inside his head while her body undergoes DemonicPossession]]), they make for an utterly lethal combination.
* In ''Fanfic/{{Game Theory|LyricalNanoha}}'', [[Franchise/LyricalNanoha Nanoha]] is this. She's amazingly talented with magic, but unaware of her limitations, and her childish outlook sometimes causes her to make mistakes in a fight [[spoiler:and allows Precia to play her like a fiddle.]]
* ''Fanfic/GreenTeaRescue''; Izuku can talk for hours about Quirks and the best ways to use them for superhero work, has great control with his own Quirk, and can hold his own in a fight. Everything else he's completely helpless with; he's oblivious to the fact he's the Archie in a rather heated BettyAndVeronica love triangle between [[NiceGirl Ochako]] and [[TheVamp Toga]], will let more intense people like Bakugou walk all over him, and when he stumbled across [[BigBad Shigaraki]] infiltrating U.A. he took the villain's cover story of being a lost sidekick at face value and never questioned if he was out of place.
* ''Webcomic/TheLegendOfGenji'': Kalsang is considered a prodigy amongst the next generation of airbenders and earned the rank of master at the age of fifteen. However, he lacks anything even resembling street smarts since he spent his entire life being sheltered in various Air Temples by his [[MyBelovedSmother overprotective mother]], who felt he wasn't ready to face the real world.
* Joyous Release from ''[[Fanfic/TriptychContinuum A Mark of Appeal]]'' is the daughter of two [[BoldExplorer weather surveyors]] and spent a good chunk of her formative years hiding on the edges of the wild zones due to her malfunctioning cutie mark talent. As such she is a prodigy at wilderness survival and pegasus magic, but ignorant of all but the most basic aspects of how to exist in civilized society.
* In ''Fanfic/NeitherABirdNorAPlaneItsDeku'', Tatsu Yamashiro, better known as Katana, is a skilled warrior who can easily carve through combat robots like tofu. But she's totally out of her element in a classroom setting and freezes up in front of a class full of students, forcing her to read off flash cards. She can't hold a conversation to save her life and is constantly getting lost in U.A.'s hallways.
* ''Fanfic/RosarioVampireBrightestDarkness'':
** Rason is a talented fighter and easily acclimates with Tsukune's group, but in Act II, he has to be specifically told that no matter how strong the Dark Lords are, Fairy Tale's usage of human weapons and technology ''still'' makes them a serious threat.
** Akua and Kahlua are the beautiful and powerful eldest daughters of Issa Shuzen, to the extent that they can effortlessly defeat Inner Moka and Tsukune in their first fight, but in Act III, they're genuinely shocked that Kiria's plan to TimeTravelForFunAndProfit, which they helped him with in hopes of giving their father a place in the new world he hoped to create, would have [[InTheirOwnImage been entirely for his own benefit]], and part of said plan was killing their father.
* In ''Fanfic/TheUniversiad'', Celestia was this back in the Black Queen War. Her younger self, while still stupendously powerful, naïvely held out for a cure to the Plague where far more experienced and hardened Forumers had established the impossibility of doing so. Reactions varied widely from admiration of her tenacity to derision.
* ''Fanfic/OneDayAtATimeNyame'': This is why Jason refuses to let Cass help with the search for the Joker in the latter half of the story. While she is easily on the same level as Bruce in hand-to-hand combat, it takes more than martial prowess to capture the Joker, and Cass still has very little knowledge of the outside world and experience as a vigilante.
* In the ''WesternAnimation/{{WITCH}}'' fic ''Stirred'' (sequel to ''Ripples''), the Guardians are portrayed as this at the start of their tenure, as they have the strongest magic around, and absolutely no clue how to be adventurers. Several characters comment on just how incompetent their rescue party of Caleb on their first mission is — yet they still make it out against unbeatable odds (with a little secret help from Vathek and Narissa).
* ''Fanfic/ThroughHerEyes'':
** Weiss is this, as in canon, having never really faced any actual Grimm before. She also gets distracted and emotional easily, hindering her.
** Ruby is also this, as Pyrrha notes at one point. She's legitimately skilled with Crescent Rose, especially when fighting Grimm, but she tends to hesitate before attacking too much when sparring, focuses on defending her teammates to the point that she leaves herself vulnerable, and sometimes is less than fully aware of the positioning of nearby walls. Later, she assumes that someone trying to sell her and Blake drugs was attempting to sell them [[AnIcePerson Ice Dust]], and didn't realize it until Blake said that she was reasonably certain that he was a drug dealer.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
* The team in ''Film/AnacondaTheHuntForTheBloodOrchid'' are brilliant in their academic fields of biology, chemistry, and pharmacology, but don't appear to have spent a single night in their lives camping before venturing to Borneo in search of the titular flower.
* Colossus in ''Film/Deadpool2'' might have more experience than the usual examples of this trope, but he still falls into it, as his [[WideEyedIdealist idealistic]] and [[NiceGuy empathic]] personality leaves him far too trusting for his own good (he never realized something was off with [[OrphanageOfFear Essex]] until Deadpool brought the place into the light) and makes him something of a doormat.
* ''Film/RevengeOfTheSith'': Chancellor Sheev Palpatine/Darth Sidious seems to think that way of his late master, Darth Plagueis, who possessed great abilities but was uncharacteristically altruistic for a Sith, enough to teach his apprentice how to create life, and trust Palpatine not to kill him.
-->'''Palpatine''': He had ''[[AdmiringTheAbomination such a knowledge of the Dark Side]]'', he could even stop the ones he cared about from dying... [sic] Unfortunately, he taught his apprentice everything he knew, [[TheStarscream then his apprentice killed him in his sleep]]. Ironic... he could save others from death, but not himself.
* The [=ISOs=] from ''Film/TronLegacy''. Femtoseconds after they form, they are able to communicate clearly, and learn damn near anything.
-->'''Flynn''': Profoundly naïve, yet unimaginably wise.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Literature]]
* ''Literature/TheAsteriskWar'': When protagonist Ayato Amagiri faces minor {{recurrer}} Elliot Forster in the Phoenix Festa semifinal, he comments in his InternalMonologue that, given time and practice, Elliot might become better with the sword than himself. Until then, though, despite only having his backup weapon instead of his usual Orga Lux Ser Veresta, Ayato's greater experience and physical strength from being a few years older give him enough of an edge to win.
* Garion, the titular hero of ''Literature/TheBelgariad'', is said to have the potential to be one of the most powerful sorcerers that ever lived - something later demonstrated in the sequel series. He has performed several feats that other sorcerers regularly defied as being outright impossible, such as resurrecting a dead horse, [[AchievementsInIgnorance simply by not being aware that it shouldn't have worked]]. And yet, even after overcoming the trials on his initial ComingOfAgeStory and becoming a skilled warrior and respected king as of ''Literature/TheMalloreon'', he still has a tendency to play fast and loose with his powers in ways that could have grave consequences for hundreds of years. Fortunately his grandfather and aunt have (respectively) seven and three thousand years of experience with which to guide him.
* In the second ''[[TabletopGame/Warhammer40000 A Dawn of Fire]]'' novel ''The Gate of Bones'', the highly idealistic Shield-Captain Achallor of the Adeptus Custodes is an amazing fighter and diplomat. He's had thousands of years of training and combat experience but almost all of his life has been spent in isolated guard duty. As such he's largely ignorant of the fanaticism and social decay that's happened to the Imperium. The pilot of his ship is an old lady who surprises herself at having maternal feelings for the ancient bio-engineered warrior because of his naivety.
* In ''Literature/TheDinosaurLords'', for all her youth, Melodía is actually brilliant and very well educated in matters of warfare, but woefully lacking in practical experience, way too idealistic and too used to having everything served to her on a silver platter, leading to more than a few stumbles before she [[TookALevelInBadass takes a level in badass]].
* Corporal Carrot Ironfoundersson in his first two appearances in ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' is naive, but he's not ''stupid''. He adapts to [[WretchedHive Ankh-Morpork]] really quickly, mostly due to being smarter than he looks, but also due to PlotArmor and [[MagneticHero people liking him]].
* Harry Dresden from ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'' takes this trope and runs with it. Until he starts [[spoiler: offing gods and ''species'' and learning about the underlying conflicts in the series]], he has a reputation as a magical thug. In the early books, it's a [[OnceAnEpisode regular]] occurrence for someone with more experience to tell him that's he's in over his head. They're right, though Harry usually [[HonorBeforeReason won't]] or can't back out at that point. Even he admits that his continued survival is as much luck as anything else. However, as time goes on, he uses the reputation as a magical thug to out-manoeuvre some exceptionally scary opponents, who persist in underestimating him.
* In ''Literature/FiveHundredYearsAfter'' by Steven Brust, Mario is hired to assassinate the Emperor because he fits this trope. [[spoiler:He's being set up to fail; [[SpringtimeForHitler he doesn't]].]] In all the other books where he appears or is mentioned, it's enough later that he's become an OldMaster.
* Shannon Foraker of the ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' series is this. She is a phenomenally competent Tactical Officer, earning the nickname "Tac Witch" because of her nearly magic ability to work out problems. She is so focused on her work, however, that she pretty much ignores everything else. Unfortunately, during the 7th and 8th books, several events yank her into the real world and cause her to become much more introverted... and possibly dangerous to herself and those around her. One of her superior officers notes her loss of naïveté with regret, as it was one of the things that made her so likable - if occasionally exasperating.
* Parzival in ''Literature/{{Parzival}}'' is this for the first half of the poem, before gradually coming to self-awareness.
* ''Literature/SixOfCrows'': Before arriving in [[WrongSideOfTheTracks the Barrel]], Wylan had spent the past sixteen years as a wealthy merchant’s son, and is newer to crime than any other main character. He’s also a DemolitionsExpert who’s absolutely brilliant at chemistry.
* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'':
** Brienne is a woman in a male-dominated society and is able to fight on equal level with many of them in a stand-up fight--the first thing she does on screen is defeat [[KnightInShiningArmour Loras Tyrell]], the Knight of Flowers, who is widely agreed to be one of the greatest fighters alive. Even [[BloodKnight Jaime "Kingslayer" Lannister]] admits she's stronger than him, though he also says she needs more experience to be truly deadly. Unfortunately, Brienne is a WideEyedIdealist in a CrapsackWorld where AnyoneCanDie. This [[FailureKnight doesn't work very well]] for her.
** In regards to his family: [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireJaimeLannister Jaime Lannister]] genuinely believed that [[ManipulativeBitch Cersei]] and [[TheChessmaster Tyrion]] never ever lied to him. Also, in a dream where he faced the ghosts of Rhaegar and the former Kingsguards members, he said that he didn't do anything to protect Elia and her children because he thought that Tywin wasn't going to hurt them.
** Robb Stark is an incredibly skilled battle commander despite being only 16 and never going to war before. He wins every battle he commands in and shows exceptional cunning in his strategies. [[spoiler: But his inability to fully grasp the bitterness and potential for treachery in the likes of Walder Frey and Roose Bolton, utter naïveté about Greyjoy and Iron Island family dynamics, and his insistence of HonorBeforeReason regarding Jeyne Westerling led to him losing the war and his life.]]
* Matteo Ta'anari of ''Literature/SomeoneElsesWar'' is clever and tenacious, but completely unprepared for military life. Which, as a newly conscripted {{Child Soldier|s}}, may not be in his favor. On the other hand, it's what motivates him to organize a [[LaResistance grand escape]].
* ''[[Literature/TheCrescentMoonKingdoms Throne of the Crescent Moon]]'': Raseed is a young dervish with KnightTemplar attitudes towards personal conduct. His mentor, a worldly old sorcerer, is constantly criticizing him for only caring about fighting and knowing nothing about life. He's constantly saying and doing things that cause problems, forcing his friends to rein him in.
* ''Literature/TheWheelOfTime'' plays with this a bit. Most of the main characters start out as UnskilledButStrong. When they start to get some training they transition to Skilled But Naive, and then as the series progresses they [[CharacterDevelopment mostly lose their naivete]] (except for Elayne who remains somewhat spoiled and naive throughout the whole series, right up until the end, when she learns several hard lessons).

[[/folder]]

[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
%%* Chuck of... ''Series/{{Chuck}}'' starts off this way.
* Spencer Reid from ''Series/CriminalMinds'' fits this trope. His extraordinary intelligence makes him a valuable asset to the team but it is frequently mentioned that he is naïve and maladjusted.
%%* River Tam from ''Series/{{Firefly}}''.
* Kate Bishop in ''Series/Hawkeye2021'' is a highly skilled and gifted young martial artist and archer, but she's also from a privileged background and is used to honing her skills in a structured and controlled environment. When she tries to utilize her skills out of those environments, she habitually creates huge messes and winds up in situations that are way out of her depth solely because she lacks the practical knowledge and experience to know when something is a bad idea, how a situation could conceivably spiral out of control, and how many variables and moving parts exist in street-level combat situations.
* ''Series/KamenRiderGaim'': Takatora Kureshima is the strongest of the series' rider ensemble, capable of beating any of them in fight with just pure skill, obsolete driver and normal Lockseed. Unfortunately, he has serious case of HorribleJudgeOfCharacter and WrongGenreSavvy among others. [[spoiler: His unability to understand [[GoodCannotComprehendEvil that not all people are after as noble causes as he is]] becomes his undoing]].
* ''{{Series/Legion|2017}}'': Charles Xavier is much younger and inexperienced compared to Amahl Farouk, and the former is even a newbie to the astral plane when the latter introduces him to it. Charles is a WideEyedIdealist who's far too trusting, so Farouk is able to manipulate him at first. Yet Charles is such a gifted telepath that when they brawl in a psychic battlefield, Charles trounces Farouk quite handily, tearing the Shadow King's consciousness away from his body.
* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
** Data from ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'' is, in his words, "designed to surpass humans both mentally and physically". He can perform complex calculations in his mind in mere milliseconds. But when it comes to interacting with people...
** Dr. Bashir from ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'' is this trope in the first few seasons -- he's a brilliant physician but fresh out of medical school (where he graduated second in his class), and thinks of his posting to [=DS9=] as an adventure in "frontier medicine" (something that doesn't please Major Kira, who's native to the region, ''at all''). Actor Alexander Siddig deliberately played him as very, very annoying. He grows up as the series goes, though, and in later seasons [[spoiler:it's revealed that he's been hiding [[BioAugmentation a big secret]] all his life, and so has probably never been quite as naïve as he seemed.]]
* ''Series/{{Supernatural}}'' resident angel Castiel is a case par excellence. Angels are amongst the most powerful beings in the series, but Castiel's inexperience dealing with humans and (initial) belief in his angelic superiors mean that he often trusts unwisely.
** One of the series creators has outright stated they consider him "our Data from ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration''" (See above example).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Music]]
* Many OutsiderMusic artists fall in this trope. Some are quite naïve people who nevertheless make highly unique and original music.
* Music/WillieNelson actually has a song titled "Old Age and Treachery", with the chorus continuing "always overcomes youth and skill".
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* ''TabletopGame/EclipsePhase'': anyone with the Real World Naïveté trait, ''especially'' artificial intelligences (which come with RWN by default).
* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'': Something of a stereotype among the Tau, who have some of the best tech in the galaxy, but an unfortunate tendency to assume that the rest of the galaxy is as sensible as they are, instead of everyone being AlwaysChaoticEvil [[StupidEvil to the point of occasional absurdity]].
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Video Games]]
* ''VideoGame/AdvanceWars'' has Colin, who is introduced in the second game as having [[NewMeat just become a CO of Blue Moon]]. He's obviously very skilled as a CO, able to keep up with the ''far'' more accomplished Grit and Olaf, but lacks the confidence and experience to use his troops as effectively as they can. [[GameplayAndStoryIntegration In terms of gameplay]], this manifests as his troops being weaker than average, but his ability to ZergRush his foes into submission makes him one of the most formidable commanding officers in the game.
* ''VideoGame/DawnOfWarII'': Thaddeus, the youngest of the SpaceMarine cast is a bizarre case. Despite being a SpaceMarine sergeant, which in 40K involves decades of reconstructive surgery, indoctrination, and TrainingFromHell before you can advance to the lowest rank (case in oint: Thaddeus being the youngest at a mere ''75'' years old), he displays a remarkable lack of savviness regarding the nature of their service, or that they are no longer part of humanity (he keeps insisting that the Blood Ravens should save his homeworld Meridian before the other planets due to its greater value to him and him alone).
* [[CuteClumsyGirl Merrill]] of ''VideoGame/DragonAgeII'' is a young Dalish elf who happens to be a brilliant mage and excellent historian. Aside from a mage Hawke, she's the single most powerful member of the party. Unfortunately, she's had next to no life experience and, as a result, she's a gullible, distracted ditz with almost ''no'' common sense. If it weren't for the fact that half of the party looks out for her, she'd probably never have survived her first year in Kirkwall.
* In a strange way, the Brotherhood of Steel in ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas''. The Brotherhood is the single oldest organization in the Western U.S., and their access to pre-war technology and military-level training gives them enormous power, but their close-mindedness and isolationist policies have led them to lose contact with reality. The Brotherhood simply refuses to see that their advantage in quality, in all aspects of society, is shrinking daily, and their disadvantage in quantity grows even quicker.
* ''Franchise/FireEmblem'':
** Fir, from ''VideoGame/FireEmblemTheBindingBlade'', is skillful as she tries to chase her mother Karla's legacy as a swordmaster. But she recklessly challenges the first fighter she sees at an arena, not considering that these are [[DuelToTheDeath to-the-death]] affairs, and lucks out in picking NiceGuy Noah. Later she is easily hoodwinked into lending her blade to some pirates who are obviously out for her InfinityMinusOneSword when they tell her that Roy's group are the bad guys--she's shocked when she sees Noah among them and almost [[AttackHello attacks when he says hello]].
** Princess Tana from ''VideoGame/FireEmblemTheSacredStones'' starts like this. She ''is'' a PluckyGirl with quite the talent to ride pegasi and use a spear, but she's also very sheltered by her brother and has just finished her official training. This leads her to catch a huge DistressBall in Ephraim's route, but with some training, she can become quite the powerhouse.
* ''Franchise/MassEffect'':
** Liara in the first game. Young by [[GreenSkinnedSpaceBabe asari]] standards, inexperienced, and will fry your brain or throw you across the room if you piss her off. [[CharacterDevelopment Not anymore in]] ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'', as the Shadow Broker's attempt to do Shepard harm two years before have turned her into a character hellbent on getting revenge.
** Tali is also an example: While not as naïve as Liara, she ''did'' go to the Shadow Broker for protection, which everyone knows is a bad idea. This almost gets her killed twice over (the Broker told Fist to kill her [[YouHaveOutlivedYourUsefulness when she turned over the data]], but Fist had gone over to work for Saren and thus wanted to kill her [[HeKnowsTooMuch before Saren could be implicated]]).
* ''VideoGame/MegaManX'' is shown to have been very naïve when he started out as a Maverick Hunter, especially in the ''X1'' remake ''Maverick Hunter X'' and its OVA prequel The Day of "Sigma", though he's also stated to have limitless potential.
* N of ''VideoGame/PokemonBlackAndWhite'' is very good at his job (as an extremist semi-cult puppet leader) because he is a VERY naïve person. It's even mentioned in-game.
* Sanada Yukimura from ''VideoGame/SengokuBasara'' is this trope personified. He's HotBlooded and impulsive, doesn't know the first thing about strategy but is skilled enough to take down most enemies, and those he can't he takes down through sheer determination. It's also implied that he has a great deal of potential that hasn't been unlocked yet, mainly due to his lack of experience, forethought and gullible personality.
* ''VideoGame/{{Undertale}}'': Papyrus is implied on more than one occasion to be remarkably powerful among monsters, due to his ability to manipulate battlefield conditions, his incredibly precise control of his powers, and [[spoiler: his brother Sans being absurdly strong when going all out, with some indication Papyrus is at least as powerful]]. However, as Undyne believes, he is far, far too nice for his own good, and would likely die if sent into battle. [[spoiler: The player can confirm that on the Genocide route, as Papyrus dies firmly believing you can change for the better and never fighting with all he has. That said, many players gave up a Genocide run when confronted with Papyrus' belief in the player, so it's a little debatable how naïve he is]].
* ''Videogame/YakuzaLikeADragon'' has a more down-to-earth version of this with Ikari, a guy with multiple certifications from a Vocational School that makes him highly qualified on paper but is unable to land a job due to his lack of confidence that causes him to botch interviews. Specifically, he tends to default to desperate groveling during interviews.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Visual Novels]]
* ''Franchise/AceAttorney'':
** Pearl Fey is a prodigy spirit channeler, but she's still an 8-year-old girl who doesn't get family politics. She absolutely adores her cousin Maya and her mother Morgan... unaware that Morgan is actually plotting to ''kill'' Maya so Pearl could take her place as Master. She in fact serves as a SpannerInTheWorks to Morgan's plan to frame Maya for murder by retrieving evidence and proving that Ini Miney's testimony was false.
** Klavier Gavin at age 17 was a legitimately talented prosecutor despite his ImprobableAge, but his lack of experience meant he never realized when he was being used as an UnwittingPawn in a FrameUp.[[spoiler: Albeit that the framer was his brother Kristoph, so it's understandable that he didn't want to consider that Kristoph might be lying.]]
** Vera Misham is an excellent artist, but [[spoiler:her age and trauma regarding being kidnapped because of the extremely accurate forgeries she made (the kidnapper thought her father Drew was the forger, but kidnapped Vera anyway to get to him) mean that she's also a shut-in with NoSocialSkills, and she easily falls prey to Kristoph's charms and allows him to almost kill her by giving her poison under the guise of a good luck charm that would protect her if she ever left her house.]]
** In ''VisualNovel/TheGreatAceAttorney: Resolve'', Susato Mikotoba is an expert judicial assistant and the very reason Ryunosuke Naruhodo became a good lawyer. However, due to leaving Great Britain momentarily and alone at her father's behest to check up on his condition, she is left with no choice but to defend her best friend Rei Mambani from murder charges by herself. Susato pretends to be a man in order to act as her lawyer (as female lawyers are unheard of and prohibited to practice law). To her dismay, she realizes the pressure of being a defense lawyer is much different than her usual role by freezing on the spot in complete shock and acting very much like Ryunosuke under pressure (except sweating bullets of stress).
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Webcomics]]
* Seonga Yoon from ''Webcomic/DrFrost''. She's still a student, so her counseling skills aren’t exactly the best, as she tends to either overlook things or be too by the book, and she needs a lot of help. However, it's made clear she has a lot of intelligence and potential. As the series goes on, we see her develop and begin the process of becoming a great counselor.
* Grace from ''Webcomic/ElGoonishShive'' has a bit of this. She's becoming a bit less naïve, but not much.
* Yuri of ''Webcomic/ExterminatusNow'' is a prodigy with her dual beam swords, able to cut in half a speeding vehicle with a single slash. Unfortunately, she's not very good at listening to orders or thinking things through, having been raised as a demon hunter to... you know, slay demons. So she's not so great at dealing with the more subtle approach the inquisitors have to adopt. (Not that the inquisitors she's assigned to are exactly great at it.) Not to mention that in the incident mentioned above she got chewed out immediately afterwards for destroying the very evidence that they were trying to secure by stopping the vehicle.
* In ''Webcomic/MoonCrest24'', Drake's got the skills, Derek's got the naïveté.
* ''Webcomic/OnOrOff'': Kang notes that Yiyoung has a natural talent as a businessman, being capable to charm and befriend others, as well as lead and motivate his team into doing amazing work, but he is naïve and doesn't understand the corporate culture he now founds himself submerged in, nor how he can be easily manipulated or fail to demand respect from the people around him.
* ''Webcomic/StandStillStaySilent'': Emil is good at his DemolitionsExpert job, but has been doing it for less than two years when he joins the expedition and before that was a rich kid on an education track that was intended to make him an academic. His first face-to-face confrontation with a PlagueZombie, which he is expected to see a lot of during the expedition, happened in one of the early arcs of the story.
* ''Webcomic/{{Unordinary}}'': Despite her investigation skills, Remi seems to remain oblivious to all the bullying that goes on at Wellston. This is mostly a result of the bubble she ended up in amongst the Royals where she knows very little of the outside world beyond her friendships with Arlo, Isen, and Blyke.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Web Original]]
* ''Podcast/RedPandaAdventures'':
** The Red Squirrel, the Red Panda's and Kit Baxter's [[KidFromTheFuture Great-Great-Grandkid From The Future]], is an established superhero in her era. She has a RoguesGallery of her own, at least one of which is so determined to get rid of her they use time travel to try and prevent her rise as a superhero from ever happening. However, she easily falls for a trick the Red Panda uses to get her to reveal herself and, while she has enough hypnosis to put crooks to sleep, it's not enough to resist the Red Panda's attempts to get into her mind. The only thing that saves her then is the Red Panda's removing her mask and seeing how much she resembles Kit.
** "Thirteen at Table" introduces the Danger Federation, a group of young superheroes set to be trained under the Red Panda. They're all fairly impressive in their own right, but other than [[LegacyCharacter the second Molecue Max]], most aren't too sharp on the ins and outs of crime fighting and superheroics. Fortunately, that's what the Red Panda is there to teach them.
* ''WebAnimation/{{RWBY}}'': All of the teenage characters, most of whom are skilled fighters but have yet to make use of them outside of a school or teaching environment. Weiss Schnee, in particular, has to mentally go through the motions of properly adopting a fighting stance in early episodes. Justified, since they're all students at a combat academy who have yet to be taught the skills needed in order to apply their talents in unmonitored field situations. Which unfortunately goes on to [[BreakTheCutie hit them really hard]] when [[spoiler:[[CerebusSyndrome the school and the surrounding city is destroyed in a terrorist attack]]]] and they're forced to do so years earlier than expected.
* Parian in ''Literature/{{Worm}}'' is highly skilled with her [[MindOverMatter cloth-kinesis]] at the start of the story, but none of her training or experience covers ''combat''.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arcane}}'': As an [[CopsAndDetectives Enforcer]], Caitlyn accurately claims that she is an "excellent shot" and she does a solid job of looking for evidence at a crime scene and turns it into a good working theory. But she doesn't know much about the criminal underworld or how justice really works in [[WretchedHive Zaun]].
* ''Franchise/AvatarTheLastAirbender'' franchise:
** [[Characters/AvatarTheLastAirbenderAvatarAang Aang the Avatar]] is like this in ''WesternAnimation/AvatarTheLastAirbender''. He's so naïve and kinda ditzy that characters easily forget that he's already a master-level Airbender when the show begins. The fact he's a 12-year-old kid doesn't help, either. Thankfully, none of that gets in the way of him learning '''everything''' -- '''''FAST.'''''
** [[Characters/TheLegendOfKorraAvatarKorra Korra]] from ''WesternAnimation/TheLegendOfKorra'' is skilled in three of the four elements, but due to her sheltered upbringing, she's socially inept when she goes to Republic City and discovers the [[TheRevolutionWillNotBeCivilized enemies]] [[ChessMaster that]] call it home.
* Rook Blonko in ''WesternAnimation/Ben10Omniverse''. A highly-skilled Plumber, he is often mystified by Earth customs. WordOfGod mentions this was fully intentional, so he'll balance Ben's status of being roughly self-taught, but very experienced.
* ''WesternAnimation/TheVentureBrothers'': In the episode "The Lepidopterists", 21 and 24 are accompanied by Henchman #1, a totally by-the-book henchman whose [[GenreBlindness clearly never been on a single mission]]. While 21 and 24 infiltrate JJ's museum with carefree abandon (due to their SurprisinglyEliteCannonFodder status), Henchman 1 continually runs into problems and is eventually hunted down by Brock Samson. Throughout their mission, 21 and 24 attribute Henchman 1's difficulties to him being a newbie and not actually knowing what he's doing, and continue to tell him exactly how he's going to die (at Brock's hands).
** Interestingly enough, [[spoiler:it's Henchman 24 that dies, prompting 21 to TakeALevelInBadass]] while [[spoiler:Henchman 1 returns later on as Zero a couple times, most latest as part of Phantom Limb's Revenge Society]].
* Omi of ''WesternAnimation/XiaolinShowdown'' is one of the more skilled Xiaolin Dragons, but his sheltered upbringing gives him NoSocialSkills, and makes him an UnwittingPawn on more than one occasion as well as an UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom. His naivete is only enhanced by his arrogance, which causes him to overestimate his abilities.
[[/folder]]

[[folder:Real Life]]
* This can happen in educational tracks that go from high school to university to post-graduate degree without including practical applications of theory driven work. Particularly jarring with some technical occupations, for example software engineering. There are people who can explain to you in detail the theory on data structures and such, but will have a hard time writing a simple function to solve a simple problem.
* This is sometimes the case with Military Officers. Take a newly minted Officer from West Point. He's attended Airborne School, Air Assault School, Ranger School, and had four years of Officer training, but when he's put in charge of a platoon of combat-proven soldiers, he will be a bit naïve. The Navy, Air Force, and Marines are no exception. Just about every military novel, ''ever'', will mention how a green Lt. (or equivalent) needs to be paired with an experienced NCO in order to not screw up.
* This [[https://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/20/business/after-law-school-associates-learn-to-be-lawyers.html New York Times article]] claims that, at least in the USA, law school teaches you a lot about the law but nothing about how to actually be a lawyer; practical details like the paperwork that needs to be filed with a government department have to be learned on the job.
* There is an old saying in Spanish-speaking countries: ''Más sabe el diablo por viejo que por diablo''. Roughly: "The Devil knows more from being old than he does from being the Devil."
* This is often a consequence of homeschooling. One-on-one teaching allows for personalized attention and customation of curriculum, which can be very effective if the parents are good teachers and thus result in a well-instructed and intelligent child. The downside of course is that without the socialization of public schooling the child won't learn proper social and emotional skills. It's highly advisable to make sure a homeschooled child has an active social life and/or is in extracurricular clubs to learn proper social skills to overcome this.
[[/folder]]
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