Which works out to an effective pay cut. And if you can still itemize, even the IRS will take it as one, lessening the sting by whatever your effective rate is.
How is your career going?
Moderators: Bakhtosh, EvilHomer3k
- Isgrimnur
- Posts: 84880
- Joined: Sun Oct 15, 2006 12:29 am
- Location: Chookity pok
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
It's almost as if people are the problem.
- Moliere
- Posts: 12380
- Joined: Sun Sep 03, 2006 10:57 am
- Location: Walking through a desert land
Re: How is your career going?
Anyone ever done a digital interview? Interviews are stressful enough, but talking to a webcam and answering questions while watching a timer countdown is even worse. At least phone and in-person interviews give you some back and forth feedback.
"The world is suffering more today from the good people who want to mind other men's business than it is from the bad people who are willing to let everybody look after their own individual affairs." - Clarence Darrow
- ImLawBoy
- Forum Admin
- Posts: 15421
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 9:49 pm
- Location: Chicago, IL
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
I did a Telepresence interview once, but I already knew the people who were doing the interviewing, so it wasn't too bad.
That's my purse! I don't know you!
- Zarathud
- Posts: 17044
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 10:29 pm
- Location: Chicago, Illinois
How is your career going?
I came into my firm's office and did a split web conference interview where the Indiana and Ohio partners were both onscreen at the same time. It SUCKED because you're trying to present well (and can see yourself onscreen), while having to judge reactions to the in-picture screens. It helped once I realized you have to focus on the webcam, ignore your own picture and use only peripheral vision to read the other participants. Very awkward, but I got the job.
Having a timer onscreen is pretty damn cruel.
Having a timer onscreen is pretty damn cruel.
"A lie can run round the world before the truth has got its boots on." -Terry Pratchett, The Truth
"The presence of those seeking the truth is infinitely to be preferred to those who think they've found it." -Terry Pratchett, Monstrous Regiment
"The presence of those seeking the truth is infinitely to be preferred to those who think they've found it." -Terry Pratchett, Monstrous Regiment
- gbasden
- Posts: 7858
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 1:57 am
- Location: Sacramento, CA
- Zarathud
- Posts: 17044
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 10:29 pm
- Location: Chicago, Illinois
Re: How is your career going?
The Republicans suspended until 2025 the miscellaneous itemized deductions exceeding 2% of income, which is where you report unreimbursed employment expenses, home office deductions, tax preparation expenses, or theft and personal casualty losses.
"A lie can run round the world before the truth has got its boots on." -Terry Pratchett, The Truth
"The presence of those seeking the truth is infinitely to be preferred to those who think they've found it." -Terry Pratchett, Monstrous Regiment
"The presence of those seeking the truth is infinitely to be preferred to those who think they've found it." -Terry Pratchett, Monstrous Regiment
-
- Posts: 24795
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 12:58 pm
Re: How is your career going?
I currently work at a client that loves videoconferencing. I had to do a strategy interview with the CIO/CTO and then the COO of a major financial services firm via a slightly out of sync videoconference yesterday. Super fun.Zarathud wrote: ↑Wed Jan 03, 2018 6:22 pm I came into my firm's office and did a split web conference interview where the Indiana and Ohio partners were both onscreen at the same time. It SUCKED because you're trying to present well (and can see yourself onscreen), while having to judge reactions to the in-picture screens. It helped once I realized you have to focus on the webcam, ignore your own picture and use only peripheral vision to read the other participants. Very awkward, but I got the job.
Having a timer onscreen is pretty damn cruel.
-
- Posts: 36886
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 7:17 pm
- Location: Nowhere you want to be.
Re: How is your career going?
I've conducted video interviews before but never was the victim of one. I don't get the timer thing; then again, when I am interviewing someone, I try to keep things conversational and not rigid Q&A.
Black Lives Matter
- Moliere
- Posts: 12380
- Joined: Sun Sep 03, 2006 10:57 am
- Location: Walking through a desert land
Re: How is your career going?
This is not a video interview or video conference. It's an app that displays the question and records your video response to that question with a timer showing how long you have to answer that question. Some random HR recruiter will then watch your video and decide if your responses were good enough to deserve an interview with an actual person. Stupid since a person's ability to be animated and look good in this format is not likely to have anything to do with their potential job performance.
"The world is suffering more today from the good people who want to mind other men's business than it is from the bad people who are willing to let everybody look after their own individual affairs." - Clarence Darrow
- Smoove_B
- Posts: 56124
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 12:58 am
- Location: Kaer Morhen
Re: How is your career going?
So it's like you're making a dating profile for those VHS-based dating services of the 1980s, but for work? F that.
Maybe next year, maybe no go
- LordMortis
- Posts: 71699
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:26 pm
Re: How is your career going?
R&P ahead....
Spoiler:
- RunningMn9
- Posts: 24560
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:55 pm
- Location: The Sword Coast
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
Of course, we can’t (and won’t) maintain the present pace of the stock market, so no worries.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
And in banks across the world
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
- Moliere
- Posts: 12380
- Joined: Sun Sep 03, 2006 10:57 am
- Location: Walking through a desert land
Re: How is your career going?
Why do you hate 'Merica?RunningMn9 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 04, 2018 2:00 pm Of course, we can’t (and won’t) maintain the present pace of the stock market, so no worries.
#MAGA
"The world is suffering more today from the good people who want to mind other men's business than it is from the bad people who are willing to let everybody look after their own individual affairs." - Clarence Darrow
- LordMortis
- Posts: 71699
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:26 pm
Re: How is your career going?
RunningMn9 wrote: ↑Thu Jan 04, 2018 2:00 pm Of course, we can’t (and won’t) maintain the present pace of the stock market, so no worries.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
I've been going up like 1% a day, every day. If our corporations are making that kind of money to grow like that, how can we possibly not maintain that pace? There's money everywhere. Whoohoo!!!! I'ma be rich!
- RunningMn9
- Posts: 24560
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:55 pm
- Location: The Sword Coast
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
I know you're being sarcastic. So was I.LordMortis wrote: ↑Fri Jan 05, 2018 5:13 pmI've been going up like 1% a day, every day. If our corporations are making that kind of money to grow like that, how can we possibly not maintain that pace? There's money everywhere. Whoohoo!!!! I'ma be rich!
And in banks across the world
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
- LordMortis
- Posts: 71699
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:26 pm
Re: How is your career going?
I'm telling you. 1... percent... a day... My 401k is growing more daily than I make in my semi monthly paycheck. This is what it's like to be part of the one percent. I need a yacht.
- Kraken
- Posts: 45065
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:59 pm
- Location: The Hub of the Universe
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
The top 1% own 40% of the stocks. The top 5% own 80%. They're partying like it's 1999.
The rest of us are going to pay for it through the Medicare and Social Security cuts that are coming next.
I haven't looked at our retirement accounts for a couple of years now. I really ought to rebalance things.
The rest of us are going to pay for it through the Medicare and Social Security cuts that are coming next.
I haven't looked at our retirement accounts for a couple of years now. I really ought to rebalance things.
-
- Posts: 36886
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 7:17 pm
- Location: Nowhere you want to be.
Re: How is your career going?
Last time I checked mine, it was doing a great job bucking market trends. It must be invested in our company stock, which is down about 50%'in the past year.
Black Lives Matter
- Kraken
- Posts: 45065
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:59 pm
- Location: The Hub of the Universe
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
Ours are mostly in index and retirement date funds, so they just follow the herd. As long as the general markets are rising, I don't have to think about it.
- Isgrimnur
- Posts: 84880
- Joined: Sun Oct 15, 2006 12:29 am
- Location: Chookity pok
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
Assuming that I don't manage to tank the system conversion on the merger, boss thinks I'll be a lock for the AVP slot when the end-of-April shuffle comes along. Maybe I can actually max out my IRA contributions with the raise.
I'm bucking for the minion to get moved to Senior Developer, which would be 2.5 years out of the gates from school. She's taken on a lot of tasks that have had some complexity to them, handled them well, and been the sole point of contact with upper management stakeholders. She's been a tremendous asset.
I'm bucking for the minion to get moved to Senior Developer, which would be 2.5 years out of the gates from school. She's taken on a lot of tasks that have had some complexity to them, handled them well, and been the sole point of contact with upper management stakeholders. She's been a tremendous asset.
It's almost as if people are the problem.
- stessier
- Posts: 30130
- Joined: Tue Dec 21, 2004 12:30 pm
- Location: SC
Re: How is your career going?
Wow - I just found out about a group reward at work that is leaving out a bunch of people who did a lot of the work (including me). My morale didn't just plummet - I'm actively angry. Well done, Management!
I require a reminder as to why raining arcane destruction is not an appropriate response to all of life's indignities. - Vaarsuvius
Global Steam Wishmaslist Tracking
Global Steam Wishmaslist Tracking
Running__ | __2014: 1300.55 miles__ | __2015: 2036.13 miles__ | __2016: 1012.75 miles__ | __2017: 1105.82 miles__ | __2018: 1318.91 miles | __2019: 2000.00 miles |
- EvilHomer3k
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 8029
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 10:45 pm
- Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
Re: How is your career going?
I just found out my job is being eliminated. My boss is giving me a good recommendation and said he'd give glowing reviews. I do get a decent severance package and am going to use the time to look into teaching. I applied for the renewal of my teaching license (which expired in 1998) and have completed my Mandatory Reporter training. I went to school for teaching but never did it (got a job in IT and have been there since). Now I have to wait 4-6 weeks for the license to be renewed and then I can apply to sub. Thankfully, our youngest starts school in the fall so no daycare after summer. Still going to be a shock to our budget as I'll be making considerably less than I do now.
That sound of the spoon scraping over the can ribbing as you corral the last ravioli or two is the signal that a great treat is coming. It's the washboard solo in God's own
bluegrass band of comfort food. - LawBeefaroni
bluegrass band of comfort food. - LawBeefaroni
- naednek
- Posts: 11031
- Joined: Tue Oct 19, 2004 9:23 pm
Re: How is your career going?
I work for the State of California. One of the things that have been hindering hiring or employee retention is the disparity between government wages and the private side. I personally didn't complain too much because for me the benefits such as health and pension is more valuable for me, especially healthcare with Ethan and his CF... But that's now also in jeopardy due to many factors.
Our union has been in talks with the State HR about reducing the many different classifications in IT and adjusting the pay to help with parity. They reached an agreement with the state about the class restructure, but the pay is still in negotiations. Instead of waiting for that to be resolved, they decide to move everyone in the new classification. Which is fine at first glance, it's just a title change, and now instead of being on top of my range I can now keep growing each year for a few more years.
But looking at it more, they have now made my new class Exempt. Meaning no paid OT. There has been no discussions with management about this change. All my info is from the union, and from a friend who works in HR. I had about 5 OT projects lined up between March and June and now instead of being paid time and half, they get my time for free. They essentially took my position and combined with the next position up who was exempt and made it exempt. It sucks because I was counting on this extra cash and I didn't have any control over any of this or any notification.
My only hope is after they come with an agreement on the new pay structure, they will retroactively pay us our new wages, but I'm sure that's not going to happen, because it's the state.
Happy to have the job, just wished there was communication ahead of time.
Our union has been in talks with the State HR about reducing the many different classifications in IT and adjusting the pay to help with parity. They reached an agreement with the state about the class restructure, but the pay is still in negotiations. Instead of waiting for that to be resolved, they decide to move everyone in the new classification. Which is fine at first glance, it's just a title change, and now instead of being on top of my range I can now keep growing each year for a few more years.
But looking at it more, they have now made my new class Exempt. Meaning no paid OT. There has been no discussions with management about this change. All my info is from the union, and from a friend who works in HR. I had about 5 OT projects lined up between March and June and now instead of being paid time and half, they get my time for free. They essentially took my position and combined with the next position up who was exempt and made it exempt. It sucks because I was counting on this extra cash and I didn't have any control over any of this or any notification.
My only hope is after they come with an agreement on the new pay structure, they will retroactively pay us our new wages, but I'm sure that's not going to happen, because it's the state.
Happy to have the job, just wished there was communication ahead of time.
hepcat - "I agree with Naednek"
- EvilHomer3k
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 8029
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 10:45 pm
- Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
Re: How is your career going?
I finished everything I need to sub. Have my first sub job on Wednesday, teaching computer classes to middle school kids for the day. Seems like a good place to start.
That sound of the spoon scraping over the can ribbing as you corral the last ravioli or two is the signal that a great treat is coming. It's the washboard solo in God's own
bluegrass band of comfort food. - LawBeefaroni
bluegrass band of comfort food. - LawBeefaroni
- tjg_marantz
- Posts: 14692
- Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 12:54 pm
- Location: Queen City, SK
Re: How is your career going?
Got your gun?EvilHomer3k wrote:I finished everything I need to sub. Have my first sub job on Wednesday, teaching computer classes to middle school kids for the day. Seems like a good place to start.
Home of the Akimbo AWPs
- EvilHomer3k
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 8029
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 10:45 pm
- Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
Re: How is your career going?
R&P is over here.tjg_marantz wrote: ↑Mon Feb 26, 2018 5:04 amGot your gun?EvilHomer3k wrote:I finished everything I need to sub. Have my first sub job on Wednesday, teaching computer classes to middle school kids for the day. Seems like a good place to start.
That sound of the spoon scraping over the can ribbing as you corral the last ravioli or two is the signal that a great treat is coming. It's the washboard solo in God's own
bluegrass band of comfort food. - LawBeefaroni
bluegrass band of comfort food. - LawBeefaroni
- Paingod
- Posts: 13214
- Joined: Wed Aug 25, 2010 8:58 am
Re: How is your career going?
While I'm still looking for a new job, I'm at least getting a little perk in a couple days - a small corner office.
One of the owners decided that the corporate office in the practice had gotten too small and wanted to put a couple other "administrative" people there, so we're moving into the empty office space next door, which will about double our space. I've had the space rewired from Cat5 (not even 5e) to Cat6 and when the senior staff were allowed to select their offices, I jockeyed for the corner and got it. It's not the smallest, but it's got a window view over a river and a workbench on one side I can use for builds and repairs. The biggest bonus, though, is that I'll be able to dub off a little - read the news, check email, visit OO - without fear of prying eyes looking over my shoulder. My current setup puts my back to three other people, all of whom can see both of my screens when they turn around and get up.
As someone who spends all day troubleshooting and planning and researching, brain breaks (cat videos!) are imperative.
One of the owners decided that the corporate office in the practice had gotten too small and wanted to put a couple other "administrative" people there, so we're moving into the empty office space next door, which will about double our space. I've had the space rewired from Cat5 (not even 5e) to Cat6 and when the senior staff were allowed to select their offices, I jockeyed for the corner and got it. It's not the smallest, but it's got a window view over a river and a workbench on one side I can use for builds and repairs. The biggest bonus, though, is that I'll be able to dub off a little - read the news, check email, visit OO - without fear of prying eyes looking over my shoulder. My current setup puts my back to three other people, all of whom can see both of my screens when they turn around and get up.
As someone who spends all day troubleshooting and planning and researching, brain breaks (cat videos!) are imperative.
Black Lives Matter
2021-01-20: The first good night's sleep I had in 4 years.
2021-01-20: The first good night's sleep I had in 4 years.
- Kraken
- Posts: 45065
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:59 pm
- Location: The Hub of the Universe
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
A few weeks ago I agreed to edit the Boston Globe's annual "Salute to Nurses" package, which is actually produced by a contractor, making me a subcontractor. They expected about 400 letters of nomination, which I would clean up and organize. Their offer was on the low side, but in the ballpark of my time estimate, and since I'm likely to get more assignments from these people, I accepted.
The letters trickled in at first, and I found that I could process 4-5 nurses an hour, versus the 6 that I had estimated. As time went by the trickle turned into a flood. Fully half of them arrived last week, and I'm now 60 nurses behind. Once I finally have them all compiled, I've got some cleanup and manipulating to do, and my role should be finished by the end of next week. I hope the boss lady likes my work because she hasn't seen anything I've done yet, and I only had vague general directions.
Holy hell, the general public cannot write! That's why they need me, sure, but the general level of literacy is lower than I would have guessed. As of this afternoon I'd finished 368 of these things, and I am at the point where I don't ever want to see another one. A large fraction of the submitters don't even spell their own names right, most of them mangle the name of the nurse's employer, and every single nurse is a "compassionate" "angel" with "amazing clinical knowledge" who "goes above and beyond" to "advocate" for "patients and their families." Part of my job is cutting out the cliches and boilerplate language, and sometimes there's nothing left. Still, I'm discouraged from rejecting letters because the more they print, the more advertising they can sell, and that's what it's all about.
If they hire me to do this again next year, my price is going up. I'm regretting accepting the lowball offer because I hadn't factored the abysmal quality of the submissions into my time estimate. Also, most of the stories are about or from sick and dying people, and that gets depressing.
The letters trickled in at first, and I found that I could process 4-5 nurses an hour, versus the 6 that I had estimated. As time went by the trickle turned into a flood. Fully half of them arrived last week, and I'm now 60 nurses behind. Once I finally have them all compiled, I've got some cleanup and manipulating to do, and my role should be finished by the end of next week. I hope the boss lady likes my work because she hasn't seen anything I've done yet, and I only had vague general directions.
Holy hell, the general public cannot write! That's why they need me, sure, but the general level of literacy is lower than I would have guessed. As of this afternoon I'd finished 368 of these things, and I am at the point where I don't ever want to see another one. A large fraction of the submitters don't even spell their own names right, most of them mangle the name of the nurse's employer, and every single nurse is a "compassionate" "angel" with "amazing clinical knowledge" who "goes above and beyond" to "advocate" for "patients and their families." Part of my job is cutting out the cliches and boilerplate language, and sometimes there's nothing left. Still, I'm discouraged from rejecting letters because the more they print, the more advertising they can sell, and that's what it's all about.
If they hire me to do this again next year, my price is going up. I'm regretting accepting the lowball offer because I hadn't factored the abysmal quality of the submissions into my time estimate. Also, most of the stories are about or from sick and dying people, and that gets depressing.
- wire
- Posts: 2190
- Joined: Wed Oct 13, 2004 2:29 am
- Location: Monterey, CA
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
I've worked in higher education for sixteen years now and feel like I really need a career change. I started off as an Admin Support Coordinator for the film school, moved to the Class Scheduling Office at the same classification and after 2 years was promoted to Admin Analyst, which brought a sizeable pay raise. I put in a total of three years in the Scheduling Office before landing a job in the Registrar's Office as an Information Technology Consultant - Career and working title of Records Functional Analyst. I'm now the Lead Records Analyst after 8 years and pretty much make sure that all of the Peoplesoft processes run and that student data is audited and correct and project coordinate the occasional modification of the baseline product. In those sixteen years I'm pretty much at the highest level I can achieve and have a pretty decent salary.
After sixteen years I really want a career change and i kind of feel like I'm stuck with higher education now. We want to move back to the Pacific Northwest and I'm having a hard time finding any jobs in higher ed that appeal to me. Has anyone else done a career change at 50?
After sixteen years I really want a career change and i kind of feel like I'm stuck with higher education now. We want to move back to the Pacific Northwest and I'm having a hard time finding any jobs in higher ed that appeal to me. Has anyone else done a career change at 50?
- Isgrimnur
- Posts: 84880
- Joined: Sun Oct 15, 2006 12:29 am
- Location: Chookity pok
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
Peoplesoft should be portable outside of the higher education realm.
It's almost as if people are the problem.
- Tao
- Posts: 1540
- Joined: Sat Nov 20, 2004 3:47 pm
Re: How is your career going?
I did good work for 20 years, learned a lot and developed my skills to a fairly high level, but I took no risks, played it safe and allowed my wheels to fall in to a rut. Your age should not be a deciding factor in a decision to change careers, in my opinion it's irrelevant. What is relevant is do you have another set of skills you can employ, where are you willing to start; entry level, middle or back at the top? If not are you willing to re-train, whether back in school or on the job and most importantly do you have the financial stability to take an 18 month to 2 year risk. That last one is what keeps 90% of people in their current job when they are no longer satisfied. When I made an attempt at a career change I had no kids, very little debt, a second income and a decent cushion of liquid capital to fall back on. If you can check a couple of those boxes I would say go for it. 50 is not what it used to be, at the very least you probably have another 15 to 16 years left before retirement. That's a whole new career.
Last edited by Tao on Mon Mar 26, 2018 9:18 am, edited 2 times in total.
"Don't touch my stuff when I'm dead...it's booytrapped!" - Bender Bending Rodriguez
- RunningMn9
- Posts: 24560
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:55 pm
- Location: The Sword Coast
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
wire - it isn’t clear to me that you are looking for a career change so much as an industry change? Higher Ed isn’t your career (since it doesn’t sound like you are higher ed’ing people). It sounds like Higher Ed is the industry in which you do what your career is (sounds IT-ish, but you can correct me if I’m wrong).
In any case, I went through a similar situation back in 2010 when I got laid off, albeit at the tender age of 36. I had spent my entire 16 year career to that point in the telecom industry, and beyond that it focused almost entirely in programming telecom equipment at the device driver level (with some other embedded work alongside that).
When I got laid off I took a step back and thought about what I wanted to do, and at the time I wanted to move higher up the stack to do application development in a more modern programming language.
The challenge then was to properly craft my sales pitch. I have a ton of experience in my field, applied to the telecom industry. I have a ton of desire to apply that to this new area (different industry, but same field - software engineering).
If you can figure out how to map your experience to a new challenge, and you can genuinely demonstrate enthusiasm for it, that will go a long way. I got two offers, both letting me do what I wanted rather than what I was best at, so it worked out for me on that front (couldn’t be happier than I am now at my current position).
If you are talking a completely different field, rather than just an industry change, that’s not impossible, but it’s harder and probably requires re-training. Best of luck on whichever path you choose!
In any case, I went through a similar situation back in 2010 when I got laid off, albeit at the tender age of 36. I had spent my entire 16 year career to that point in the telecom industry, and beyond that it focused almost entirely in programming telecom equipment at the device driver level (with some other embedded work alongside that).
When I got laid off I took a step back and thought about what I wanted to do, and at the time I wanted to move higher up the stack to do application development in a more modern programming language.
The challenge then was to properly craft my sales pitch. I have a ton of experience in my field, applied to the telecom industry. I have a ton of desire to apply that to this new area (different industry, but same field - software engineering).
If you can figure out how to map your experience to a new challenge, and you can genuinely demonstrate enthusiasm for it, that will go a long way. I got two offers, both letting me do what I wanted rather than what I was best at, so it worked out for me on that front (couldn’t be happier than I am now at my current position).
If you are talking a completely different field, rather than just an industry change, that’s not impossible, but it’s harder and probably requires re-training. Best of luck on whichever path you choose!
And in banks across the world
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
Christians, Moslems, Hindus, Jews
And every other race, creed, colour, tint or hue
Get down on their knees and pray
The raccoon and the groundhog neatly
Make up bags of change
But the monkey in the corner
Well he's slowly drifting out of range
- EvilHomer3k
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 8029
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 10:45 pm
- Location: Cedar Rapids, IA
Re: How is your career going?
I have been substitute teaching for the past two months. No job yet for next year but I start a long term sub assignment on Monday that lasts through the end of the school year. I also got a thanks but no thanks on a position I applied for teaching technology classes at a middle school (not even an interview). Subbing has been fun despite the fact that many kids try to take as much advantage of the sub as they can. I've had to repeat myself dozens of times, kick kids out of class, call the office for support, break up fights, and dump pee out of a garbage can (bathroom in the classroom of a 3rd grade). Despite that it was more fun than I've had in a while.
That sound of the spoon scraping over the can ribbing as you corral the last ravioli or two is the signal that a great treat is coming. It's the washboard solo in God's own
bluegrass band of comfort food. - LawBeefaroni
bluegrass band of comfort food. - LawBeefaroni
- Kraken
- Posts: 45065
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:59 pm
- Location: The Hub of the Universe
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
I finished the "Salute to Nurses" letters and drew high praise. There will definitely be more projects from that company (for the Boston Globe).
Today I finished editing a paper that a MIT researcher submitted to the IEEE's journal. It was already laid out for print, and I had to get access to Acrobat to edit the PDF. When they sent it to me for evaluation, I told them that I (a) could not understand the half of it that was written in mathematical and scientific notation (literally lots of Greek characters), and (b) the sections that I could understand were already in very good shape and didn't need further editing. They hired me anyway because I gave them my low low proofreading rate, and they just wanted a layman's eyes on it. I routinely edit stories ABOUT science and technology; this paper actually IS science and technology.
I haven't heard back from them yet, but if they're satisfied there will be more papers from more researchers.
Not bad for an English major with little training and no professional experience. It turns out that STEM people still need us word nerds, and there aren't that many people who can bridge those worlds. At age 61 I have found a niche.
Today I finished editing a paper that a MIT researcher submitted to the IEEE's journal. It was already laid out for print, and I had to get access to Acrobat to edit the PDF. When they sent it to me for evaluation, I told them that I (a) could not understand the half of it that was written in mathematical and scientific notation (literally lots of Greek characters), and (b) the sections that I could understand were already in very good shape and didn't need further editing. They hired me anyway because I gave them my low low proofreading rate, and they just wanted a layman's eyes on it. I routinely edit stories ABOUT science and technology; this paper actually IS science and technology.
I haven't heard back from them yet, but if they're satisfied there will be more papers from more researchers.
Not bad for an English major with little training and no professional experience. It turns out that STEM people still need us word nerds, and there aren't that many people who can bridge those worlds. At age 61 I have found a niche.
- Isgrimnur
- Posts: 84880
- Joined: Sun Oct 15, 2006 12:29 am
- Location: Chookity pok
- Contact:
How is your career going?
Evaluations went in today. Both I and my minion garnered an ‘Exceeds Expectations’. Boss told me that I kicked ass through our merger. While not under his control, there’s hope that the Chief might approve my promotion to AVP, I’m trying not to get my hopes up on that one, but it’s difficult.
It's almost as if people are the problem.
- pr0ner
- Posts: 17518
- Joined: Mon Dec 06, 2004 3:00 pm
- Location: Northern Virginia, VA
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
Man. I sometimes read IEEE journals for research in my job, and they can make my eyes glaze over via dry prose and boredom. I'm impressed that you, as a layman, could do a proofread edit for them. Well done.Kraken wrote: ↑Thu Apr 12, 2018 10:30 pm I finished the "Salute to Nurses" letters and drew high praise. There will definitely be more projects from that company (for the Boston Globe).
Today I finished editing a paper that a MIT researcher submitted to the IEEE's journal. It was already laid out for print, and I had to get access to Acrobat to edit the PDF. When they sent it to me for evaluation, I told them that I (a) could not understand the half of it that was written in mathematical and scientific notation (literally lots of Greek characters), and (b) the sections that I could understand were already in very good shape and didn't need further editing. They hired me anyway because I gave them my low low proofreading rate, and they just wanted a layman's eyes on it. I routinely edit stories ABOUT science and technology; this paper actually IS science and technology.
I haven't heard back from them yet, but if they're satisfied there will be more papers from more researchers.
Not bad for an English major with little training and no professional experience. It turns out that STEM people still need us word nerds, and there aren't that many people who can bridge those worlds. At age 61 I have found a niche.
Hodor.
- Default
- Posts: 6493
- Joined: Thu Oct 14, 2004 9:01 pm
- Location: Handling bombs.
Re: How is your career going?
Thanks to Amazon ripping off the Post Office, my last check had 140 hours on it for 2 weeks. I'm on pace to hit 6 figures this year, if something doesn't fall off.
"pcp, lsd, thc, tgb...it's all good." ~ Kraken
- Kraken
- Posts: 45065
- Joined: Tue Oct 12, 2004 11:59 pm
- Location: The Hub of the Universe
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
Thanks. "Network Operation Strategies for Efficient Localization and Navigation" was not what you'd call spellbinding and slogging through 32 pages of it was hard. I made it clear that I couldn't edit for content or do any fact-checking, but I do know how to make sentences work better. The author wanted improved readability, and I think I delivered that by simple things like changing passive to active voice and substituting simple words for jargon where I was sure it didn't change his meaning. It was especially challenging because the IEEE editors had obviously already had their way with it -- his paper had already been accepted and was ready for the printer. Basically, he hired me to dumb it down a little.pr0ner wrote: ↑Thu Apr 12, 2018 11:16 pmMan. I sometimes read IEEE journals for research in my job, and they can make my eyes glaze over via dry prose and boredom. I'm impressed that you, as a layman, could do a proofread edit for them. Well done.Kraken wrote: ↑Thu Apr 12, 2018 10:30 pm I finished the "Salute to Nurses" letters and drew high praise. There will definitely be more projects from that company (for the Boston Globe).
Today I finished editing a paper that a MIT researcher submitted to the IEEE's journal. It was already laid out for print, and I had to get access to Acrobat to edit the PDF. When they sent it to me for evaluation, I told them that I (a) could not understand the half of it that was written in mathematical and scientific notation (literally lots of Greek characters), and (b) the sections that I could understand were already in very good shape and didn't need further editing. They hired me anyway because I gave them my low low proofreading rate, and they just wanted a layman's eyes on it. I routinely edit stories ABOUT science and technology; this paper actually IS science and technology.
I haven't heard back from them yet, but if they're satisfied there will be more papers from more researchers.
Not bad for an English major with little training and no professional experience. It turns out that STEM people still need us word nerds, and there aren't that many people who can bridge those worlds. At age 61 I have found a niche.
- Punisher
- Posts: 4723
- Joined: Thu Mar 24, 2005 12:05 pm
Re: How is your career going?
So... Are you hoping to get the Alien or Predator position?Isgrimnur wrote: ↑Thu Apr 12, 2018 10:45 pm Evaluations went in today. Both I and my minion garnered an ‘Exceeds Expectations’. Boss told me that I kicked ass through our merger. While not under his control, there’s hope that the Chief might approve my promotion to AVP, I’m trying not to get my hopes up on that one, but it’s difficult.
All yourLightning Bolts are Belong to Us
- Isgrimnur
- Posts: 84880
- Joined: Sun Oct 15, 2006 12:29 am
- Location: Chookity pok
- Contact:
Re: How is your career going?
Predator suits my analytical nature better. And I'm technologically oriented.
It's almost as if people are the problem.