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mods , i hope the link is ok ...
No Phi Beta Kappa invite yet!
What's the deal with these?
Yeah, I know about those Who's Who deals.
But these Honor Societies must have some backing from the schools. They had an idea of my son's grades and they had our address. One had a banquet planned for new members and their families.
Still, an Honor Society where membership is based on one semester's grades has to be a scam.
The hilarious thing is you can look up the names of these well-known diploma mills on the web and you'll find them included in the bios of many college professors, including some at major schools.
If you're not academically inclined, go get an apprenticeship, go to a polytechnic college, get a vocational qualification, do evening courses... anything but don't foul up university research based disciplines because "you want to improve your job prospects". It's got nothing to do with any job, unless that job is being a research fellow / professor.
I curse all governments and employers who confuse academic achievement with vocational aptitude. The two are entirely different and should be kept distinct.
She said, "I'm not going to do that much on this one. I'm not going for an 'A', because I don't have time to put in the effort. I just want the 'B' I paid for."
I nearly choked on my soup.
Most European universities don't even have Management programs, they don't consider it apropriate. I tend to agree. I never understood why people thought you can teach good management. Management is about leadership and or vision, and these aren't subjects particularly suited to the classroom. You either have it, or you don't.
I worked at a very big corporation to put myself through University, and there was a mix of managers who'd risen through the ranks the old fashioned way (from the mail-room, to the board room, as they say), managers who'd come up through the technical and professional departments (engineers, accountants, etc.), and managers who'd stepped right into management positions out of University, clutching MBAs to prove their skills.
Without fail, the worst managers to work for were the MBA types, and it boggled me as to why they kept hiring them, because none of them made it past middle management. All of the senior management were people who came out of technical areas of the company (mostly engineers, and a few out of accounting), with a sprinkling of bureaucratic grunts who'd risen from lowly "clerk" white collar positions and bull-dogged their way through the company. (Some of these last were AWESOME managers, they'd worked their way through this massive byzantine bureaucracy, and knew the ins and outs of virtually every department. One of the VPs when I was there was a high-school dropout, and had risen this way, and was in charge of the largest business units in the company, and was hugely well respected).
This is a "one company" example, because it was the one and only time I have ever worked directly for a massive mega-corp type company, but I believe there are a lot of other companies out there like this.
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