Your Asses Are Very Collegey College Rules
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If you are a sub, you are likely going to have to work at a specific assignment for a while, and that is often best accomplished with a dedicated buddy. It may be a buddy who has some expertise, or a buddy who can play mediator to help figure out who will get it done first. It depends on your rule set. My rule is that every_* should get a chance, and no one should be dropped at any point; survivorship bias aside, failure will happen at some point, and it’s best that it happen on the same task so everyone can learn from it.
As a 12 year old, I failed a geometry test, and my teacher gave me a C. My father helped me study for the test a second time, and I scored a B on the retake. I didn’t make the honor roll for math either time, but I was not in school long enough to really need honors credits, and my father also pushed me to study everyday, so I feel it was enough. My wife attended a very prestigious college where she was not academically successful, and she used to tell me about the times when she had to do hours of remedial math, and I remember thinking at the time that all she had missing was a gas mask.
If you’re on one of the teams, prepare to work hard. That’s not a knock on your character, it’s part of the job. If you like to work hard, it won’t seem like work to you. If you’re on shift, prepare to work hard. Without tools and reasonable forces, it’s going to be quite challenging to make accurate predictions about what will happen.
If you are a new hire, it’s best to talk with those who have already been there a while. Learn what they did, what they liked, and what they didn’t like about it. That’s where your knowledge should go. Nobody expects the same feats from a fresh hire as from someone who has already been working at this job for a year or two. d2c66b5586