sniffles
First Post
The "What Do ENworlders Do In Real Life?" thread got me thinking about previous jobs I've had, and about stupid/redundant/outdated things jobs may require employees to do. So what are some of the things you've done that just didn't make any sense, or were done because 'we've always done it that way'?
I'll start:
I used to work in group homes for developmentally disabled adults. The last home I worked in had a group of residents at the lower end of the functional scale. Most of them couldn't talk, or bathe or dress themselves. But in order to keep receiving state funding, the home had to show that it was training the residents to become independent, never mind how unlikely that prospect was.
To that end, the one client who could actually speak, bathe and dress herself was supposed to be learning to handle money. The staff were supposed to take her once a week to a frozen yogurt shop for a treat. She had to be taken on the city bus, so she could learn about riding public transit, using money, and how to cross the street. It didn't matter that abstract concepts like money and how to cross a street didn't mean anything to her, and that the word 'yogurt' wasn't even in her limited vocabulary (she called it ice cream). It had to be done, because someday she would become independent. Yeah, right. :\
I could go on about my current job in the corporate world, but Dilbert pretty much has all those issues covered.
I'll start:
I used to work in group homes for developmentally disabled adults. The last home I worked in had a group of residents at the lower end of the functional scale. Most of them couldn't talk, or bathe or dress themselves. But in order to keep receiving state funding, the home had to show that it was training the residents to become independent, never mind how unlikely that prospect was.
To that end, the one client who could actually speak, bathe and dress herself was supposed to be learning to handle money. The staff were supposed to take her once a week to a frozen yogurt shop for a treat. She had to be taken on the city bus, so she could learn about riding public transit, using money, and how to cross the street. It didn't matter that abstract concepts like money and how to cross a street didn't mean anything to her, and that the word 'yogurt' wasn't even in her limited vocabulary (she called it ice cream). It had to be done, because someday she would become independent. Yeah, right. :\
I could go on about my current job in the corporate world, but Dilbert pretty much has all those issues covered.
