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>Respect cannot be one of the terms of employment. It has to be a personal achievement. Remember >that you must be respected as an individual first, and then let that spill over into your >profession.
Well-said. When I was a university instructor, my mother-in-law
was shocked that I would encourage students to call me by my
first name. I told her that if I couldn't win their respect by my
behaviour, then I couldn't do it by insisting on the trappings of
respect, either.
Personally, after dealing with first year university and college
students, I don't find engineers very hard (come to think of it,
they're often the same people these days).
"Speak softly and carry a big stick" always seems a good idea. Be
cooperative and friendly at first, then get more insistent if
necessary.
I prefer not to make official complaints about people, but I
have:
- blockaded a cubicle entrance until I got my answers (this works
with doctors on their hospital rounds, too, by the way, if you
need to find out about a family member's condition).
- circulated review copies with "this section incomplete courtesy
of [programmer's name]."
However, these are extreme cases. In most cases, showing an
intelligent interest in learning is usually enough to get
cooperation. I doubt there's a geek or a non-geek alive who can't
be rendered helpful by asking them to talk about what they're
doing.
--
Bruce Byfield, Outlaw Communications
"The Open Road" column, Maximum Linux
3015 Aries Place, Burnaby, BC V3J 7E8, Canada
bbyfield -at- axionet -dot- com 604.421.7189
"I should have known it from the start,
It's not the truth that really matters,
The real world tramples on such things,
Leaves your mental state in tatters."
-James Keelaghan, "Small Rebellions"