Eh. Throwing generator switches doesn't ipso facto make you a better pilot. I love how automated this thing is system-wise, but I also still know (more or less...) how it works as well. (Do you know what the AC BUS TIES selector does?)
Somewhere between "build the Brasilia" and the Brave New World of shiny jet school is a happy medium that gives you a solid foundation in the airplane's systems and emphasizes flying the airplane well above "what's the blade angle out there in flight idle?"
You get out of a training program what you put into it; I will have read the CR2/7 PRM and SOPM cover to cover by my first day of class along with the FOM and the Ops Specs. (PRM and SOPM so that I know what they're talking about, and FOM/Ops Specs because upgrade. You know, Captain stuff.) I was also very well prepared for 175 school (similar effort), and so I got to focus on learning to operate the airplane. It's my general belief and experience that self-study and group-study is just as important, if not more important, than what happens in the classroom.