Re: On Summer Help

Subject: Re: On Summer Help
From: Win Day <winday -at- home -dot- com>
To: "Christensen, Kent" <lkchris -at- sandia -dot- gov>
Date: Tue, 18 Apr 2000 12:38:40 -0400

At 10:19 AM 4/18/00 -0600, Christensen, Kent wrote:

Dr. Kieffer offered: And that is why we should treat them as adults (which
they are). If this is the first experience they get in the workplace, it
should be positive. And maybe after their university studies, they will
return to work for your company. A win-win situation.

---

Yes, and this could be written even more positively. That is, if you allow
the intern to flower, to show what s/he can do, and it's good, then you know
you want him or her back. "Being treated as adults" is an ok statement but
a little vague and subject to misinterpretation, especially between younger
and older folks. "Letting them show what they can do," on the other hand,
is likely to be also a positive experience (for the kind of person you want)
and will be seen as being treated like an adult regardless of your views.

This is an amazing thread for its cultural implications. So many assume
"initiation" is always required. Even hazing?

I may have missed something here, but what in the thread so far had ANY cultural implications?

Initiation? Hazing? Starting an intern off on simple, non-mission-critical projects is common sense, not hazing.


It's just the start of
teaching the caste system, that is, "grunt" work is not as important as
something else and important people never have to do it. Will you hire
someone to change your child's diapers?

And what does hiring a tech writing intern have to do with hiring someone to change diapers? I did indeed hire someone to do that. Oh-so-many years ago, when I went back to work when my youngest was 2, I hired a full-time nanny. What in the world does that have to do with hiring a writing intern now?


Suffering child abuse does not make
it ok for you to dish it out to your child.

Whoah! Full stop! How did child abuse become part of this topic? Unless you somehow see hiring a student intern as child abuse?


Being treated badly, in any
way, was never good for you. That's only rationalization, a defense
mechanism. Some of this "initiation" stuff seems to still be accepted in
the military and I think there could be some good things among the bad in
that, and I'm not particularly qualified to argue those specifics, but for
an intern tech writer? I don't think so.


No one EVER said anything about treating an intern badly. The original questions was along the lines of "I might have the opportunity to hire a student intern and what kinds of tasks do you think I could reasonably give them?"

How does that translate into a rant about child abuse?

Win, who is really puzzling over this one
-------------------------------------------------------------

Win Day
Technical Writer

http://www.wordsplus.net

mailto:winday -at- wordsplus -dot- net

http://members.home.net/winday/index.html





Previous by Author: RE: Technical writing salaries
Next by Author: RE: On Summer Help
Previous by Thread: Re: On Summer Help
Next by Thread: RE: On Summer Help


What this post helpful? Share it with friends and colleagues:


Sponsored Ads