If I might add to this thread.
I've been a captain at my airline for 5 years and have flown with many low time newhires both on the E-120 and CJR.
I would agree that this fast track stuff teaches students to manipulate the controls, run checklists for a specific aircraft most notably the CJR, and otherwise do the job they practiced for at some of these schools that train you for that coveted right seat at a real airline.
However, I have said it 1000 times, everything I know about flying I learned from the 6 years I spent Instructing during the last down turn in the late 80's early 90's.
I'll provide one example of many to illustrate my point.
I was assigned to fly with a new hire who had about 300 hrs.
The first leg was an empty leg and I let the FO take it. It was daylight vfr with less than 10 kts wind from about 30 degrees off the nose. FO was brilliant with the paperwork, ran great checklists, radio work was weak.
We proceeded to takeoff. When the aircraft broke ground it yawed slightly (emphasis slightly) as the E-120 and many aircraft will do. The first officers response was to apply the wrong rudder. As the aircraft began to roll opposite aileron was applied, the more it rolled the more rudder was added.
Since we were empty I thought I would watch to see how far it would go. As we were about 40 degrees off runway heading and in a 40 degree bank headed for the terminal I decide to take control I completed the Takeoff and we continued to our destination.
When we reached cruise I asked what had happened. The Fo siad that they thought we had lost an engine. Bad choice with a perfectly opperating aircraft and a normal crosswind.
This illustrates my point you can train a monkey to manipulate controls and switches (NASA prover this 40 years ago) but in the real world it is experience that we as pilots have to rely on. Experiance we get from instructing, crop dusting, towing banners, flying cargo at night, flying different kinds of aircraft.
This first officer is now a captain here and unless they have been unusually unlucky has not experienced much more than the easy flying we do on a daily basis, up, down and cruise mostly with the autopilot on.
When the time comes, the experience or foundation we gained from doing the crap work or instructing etc.. is all we can rely on to get us safely through, lacking the foundation can only lead to problems.
I can almost always tell if someone went through a quickie train for the airlines type school. They can cruise through the ground school and simulators (because they have rehearsed over and over at their school and in the sim) but in the end the foundation was never built correctly and no quickie school teaches the basics, they concentrate on the CRJ or whatever.
I see bad decisions daily and most are of a fundamental nature as described above and most all are made by people who did the quickie school and were hired with 250 to 350 hrs.
These are the captains today at regionals and when the next hireing boom happens our cockpits will be filled with more.
I blame the airline management as much as anyone else. When times are tough the standards go down when good they go up. If they really cared about the safety of the traveling public I should think the standard of experience should stay constant.