Jan. 15 Personality traits: Lynda Albertson sent me this article "30 Blogs with the Best Self-Help
Advice."
http://www.nannybabysitter.com/blog/30-blogs-with-the-best-self-help-advice/
I'm
reading the Professional Success section and the article "The 10 Most
Important Personality traits for Career Success." It''s by career
counselor Tom Denham.
1.
Attitude 2. Enthusiastic 3. Ethical 4. Goal- focused 5. Listener 6. Networked 7. Persistent 8. Self-aware 9. Self-confident 10. Self- discipline
It goes into detail of why. There's even more
traits after this.
Mental health first aid: I was
reading 24 and see that Norquest College has this class. I then went to
their website and they totally changed the site. It used to be blue
and green, now it's red, orange, and yellow.
It's a 2 day class. It's: "help provided to a person developing a mental health problem or
experiencing a mental health crisis. Just as physical first aid is
administered to an injured person before medical treatment can be
obtained, MHFA is given until appropriate treatment is found or until
the crisis is resolved."
The requirement is you have to have First Aid in the past 3 yrs.
Jan. 17 Recommendations:
Also from the Professional Success section, there was a blog article
called "Recommendations from the Recently Employed." It's a short and
easy article to read, and it made me feel more positive.
1. Take good care of you. 2. Network like you mean it. 3. Roll your sleeves up. 4. Get on the leading edge. 5. Be flexible. 6. Stay positive. 7. Be prepared. 8. Be courageous.
In #5, it says: "Don’t rule out any options -relocation, change of field, change in pay
structure, and lower pay. It is important to take a hard look at what
you really need salary-wise, not necessarily what you were previously
making. Look at the intangibles – less travel, less demands outside of
work time, more family time, shorter commute." It makes you think about taking a job or not.
#8 says: "This may sound strange, but don’t be afraid to turn down something that
isn’t quite what you want. I was offered a job that I didn’t really want
working for someone I disliked in a place far from home and not where I
wanted to be, and I turned it down. Yeah, it scared me, but I had
confidence I’d find something better, and I had a backup plan just in
case I didn’t."
That seems like an easy decision because she
listed all these cons. There may be other factors like she was
unemployed for months so she might as well take this job.
http://www.job-right.com/03/recommendations-from-the-recently-employed/
Productivity: Here's
another Professional Success article. I read an article called "33
Rules to Boost your Productivity." It starts off with this:
"Heuristics are rules intended to help you solve problems. When a
problem is large or complex, and the optimal solution is unclear,
applying a heuristic allows you to begin making progress towards a
solution even though you can’t visualize the entire path from your
starting point."
That kinds reminds me of looking at careers when
you're in high school. You don't know where you want to major in, so
you take a few classes or research a college programs.
There are these tips, most of them I already know about.
3. "Worst first" like do the most unpleasant task first so you can get it out of the way. 20. "Gap reading" like when you're waiting for the bus, or riding on a bus, you do some reading.
I didn't really know about this. It did inspire me:
"31. Cross-pollination. Sign up for martial arts, start
a blog, or join an improv group. You’ll often encounter ideas in one
field that can boost your performance in another."
Business news: The Zellers at Kingsway Garden mall is still open. I checked the internet for that one.
I
read that HMV in the UK, isn't doing so well, so it's going to close
down some stores. HMV Canada is owned by another company, so the stores
in Canada are fine.
I read in the Edmonton Journal that two Giant Tiger stores have closed down in Edmonton, but there are still 3 stores open.
I
read in 24 that Capilano mall is closing down some independent stores
like All Star that sells collector's cards. The store will be moved on
Bonnie Doon
mall.
Career advice: I found this through Linked In. It
was about a career coaching session and analyzing your strengths and
interests. It also discussed your fears.
This stood out for me in the article: "Based on my key
strengths of editing, content development and packaging, Nemko
repositioned me as a "storyteller" who takes dead facts and data, and
brings them to life."
http://www.bullhornreach.com/article/view/48512?referer=www.linkedin.com&shortlink=1613490
Jan. 19: I was reading in the Edmonton Journal
today, that Capilano mall is going to keep Winners and Safeway. Bill
Mah wrote the article, and most of the stores will close down or be
renovated.
Jan. 22 Job lessons: I have changed a lot in
what I think and know about jobs and careers. In gr. 9, it was one year
before I go to high school and I was thinking about careers. I wanted
to write and produce TV shows. In the summer, before gr. 10, I was in
CALM 20. It was a two week summer school class and I learned all about
my careers, jobs, job interviews, job search stuff in that class.
In
high school, I didn't really think about working because I didn't have a
part-time job. I really couldn't because I really need to focus on
school since I wasn't good at it.
After I graduated out of high school, I passed out my resumes and got
two job interviews. One at Carlton Cards at Capilano mall and one at a
movie theatre.
This was in 2003. Later Carlton Cards closed
down. I didn't get the one at the movie theatre anyway, because they
needed someone to stay and work night shifts that ended at midnight.
That's too late for me.
I knew the bare minimum of job
interviews. Show up on time, dress nicely, give a firm handshake. I
was 18. I did a year of upgrading and got accepted into college. When I
was 18, and the summer before college I got a job at the dollar store.
It was the first real job I had gotten on my own. When I was
upgrading, my mom gave me a job and I worked there once a week, all
year long. This was in 2004.
In 2005, at NAIT, there was an
assignment towards the end of the year where we learned about job
search and interviews. We had a mock interview where a group of 4
classmates are the Interviewers. They had to interview 4 other
classmates who are the Interviewees. Interviewers had to choose who was
the best candidate for the job.
I learned a little bit more
about job interviews here. Then after that I did 2 yrs of Professional
Writing in college. By that time I was 22 yrs old, and I just knew a
bit more.
In 2010, 2011, 2012, those were the years where I
learned everything about jobs, careers, job search and interviews. I'm
27 now, and to look back that I only knew the basics of job interviews.
To
compare my job knowledge to schooling: It's like at 22 yrs old, I knew
elementary up to gr. 6. At 27 yrs old, it's like I knew everything up
to gr. 12.
It's very substantial knowledge. I'm not saying I know everything
about jobs; I still have a lot to learn. |
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