You may need showing how to position yourself for the ultimate job satisfaction
2007-01-23 07:22:25
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answer #1
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answered by . 6
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I usually read other answers before I venture a reply and having read the answer from 'ivuvafric' I was looking at your profile also ,for a possible double meaning to your question, there are a few, but I'm going to ignore them and just answer! Hope it bores you to death!!
'On the job' training is a must, whatever you are asking about, I went to collage and learnt all sorts of stuff but without practical experience it would have all been worthless, I have known very clever guys start a job with degrees up to their arm pits, but hand them a screwdriver, they don't know what to do with it, they Can tell you which country it came from and who invented it but they dont know where to stick it!!
Got my drift???
2007-01-23 15:38:25
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answer #2
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answered by budding author 7
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Definitely yes. You cannot beat hands on experience. This is something you cannot learn from lessons or textbooks. I am a skilled plumber, and in my time I have had many appretices who were attending training schools twice a week. Schools are good but they work in the perfect environment which is very different from working on site. My apprentices learnt more in the time they were with me than they ever did in training school. They learn to think for themselves when a problem arose, and find a solution to it . There is much more they can learn on site than any scool can teach them. It is the only way to learn a trade properly.
2007-01-23 15:34:59
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I certainly do- you need the practical experience of the working environment to know whether it is the vocation you choose to take. I trained as a nurse and had lots of practical experience during my studies, however I know plenty of other students on the course that hated the practical side and just jacked it - imagine having studied for 3 years and then at the end when it came to the practical side you couldnt hack it or hated it - it would be three years or however long wasted when you could have changed your career path.
2007-01-23 15:23:16
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answer #4
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answered by sarahlou 2
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How else are you going to get the experience needed in a new job. Nowadays every employer says 'experience needed'.
2007-01-23 15:45:31
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answer #5
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answered by tea 2
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Of course. It helps learn the job that you'll be doing.
2007-01-23 15:19:21
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answer #6
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answered by mzagge06 3
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You can't beat hands-on training in a Sperm Bank.
2007-01-23 15:35:45
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answer #7
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answered by Closed 4
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Oh yes there's nothing like hands on experience!
2007-01-23 15:20:56
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answer #8
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answered by MANC & PROUD 6
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It's a great way to gain experiance while getting paid.
2007-01-23 15:18:04
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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yes depends on which field
some u get to learn a lot some u juz don't
2007-01-23 15:19:42
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answer #10
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answered by astrid 5
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