Ravioli is in the can right behind the Spaghetti-O's
Yeah, where’s ravioli?!?
Yeah, where’s ravioli?!?
He wishes that was the extent of it.Principal's office?
He wishes that was the extent of it.
State penitentiary.
11 months 29 days.30 days in the hole?
11 months 29 days.
Nah, I’m jk.Serious, or is it Cirrus. Banned for a year?
Good way to put it.Maybe he’s getting sauced.
I work zero hour weeks. Be a jerk, go to work. Frank Zappa said so.Man I wish I was only working 50 hour weeks.
I work zero hour weeks.....
So do a few of my coworkers.
Happens all the time. Some employees have the 'entitlement' attitude. Our shop had one such guy who said to me "I get paid whether I produce or not."
He was fired the next day.
I've been in Buffalo Grove, IL. Going back Tuesday.
I must say, 50+ hours a week at work pays much better than 50+ hours a week on PoA.
I complain if I have to work 50 hrs a month!
Take that premium, then they won't call me!I put in for OT if I work that much.
True that. It's disgusting how employers use the salary con to not pay people what they deserve. Then they wonder why employees have no loyalty to the company. I really wonder what they teach in those management seminars.And then, some of us work well OVER 40, though our pay doesn't necessarily reflect it. (It's called a salary.) It's better than not having a job though, that's for sure.
True that. It's disgusting how employers use the salary con to not pay people what they deserve. Then they wonder why employees have no loyalty to the company. I really wonder what they teach in those management seminars.
In academia, salary is the rule rather than the exception. Professors are never paid by the hour.* The upside to that is supposed to be self-governance and tenure, but some professorships don't carry the possibility of tenure.True that. It's disgusting how employers use the salary con to not pay people what they deserve. Then they wonder why employees have no loyalty to the company. I really wonder what they teach in those management seminars.
People less fortunate than yourself sometimes have to trade work for cash, otherwise known as a job, to survive.What is this job thing so many talk about..??
People less fortunate than yourself sometimes have to trade work for cash, otherwise known as a job, to survive.
What is this job thing so many talk about..??
One more reason I have little interest in joining the academic world. Love teaching, love mentoring, but don't want to do it for some institution that reaps the profit (figuratively) and pays me very little.In academia, salary is the rule rather than the exception. Professors are never paid by the hour.* The upside to that is supposed to be self-governance and tenure, but some professorships don't carry the possibility of tenure.
*Adjunct professors are usually paid by the class or by the credit hour, which usually works out to be MUCH WORSE than a full-time salary.
In academia, salary is the rule rather than the exception. Professors are never paid by the hour.* The upside to that is supposed to be self-governance and tenure, but some professorships don't carry the possibility of tenure.
And in the case of private institutions, that reaping may not even be entirely figurative - though having sat through endless faculty meetings where university cash flow and expenses were discussed ad nauseam, I'm convinced that at least here, we aren't being shafted, it's just that overhead costs are huge.One more reason I have little interest in joining the academic world. Love teaching, love mentoring, but don't want to do it for some institution that reaps the profit (figuratively) and pays me very little.
And you have "know" idea what you're talking about. At small private universities like the one I work for, that government teat provides not enough milk to keep the place running. Tuition and materials fees provide the vast majority of the money the university spends to maintain the facilities and pay our salaries.Tell the truth... in academia the pay is irrelevant because the true aim is to stay on the government teat as long as possible, while convincing young impressionable people that it is a noble aspiration.
I've always enjoyed the ******** of educators. "We don't get paid enough."
la la la
We work 3/4 of the year for our salaries and pensions.
You have know idea how much time goes in to the lesson planning for my 11th year teaching geometry. [I know, that damn Pythagoras keeps revising his theorem]
And in the case of private institutions, that reaping may not even be entirely figurative - though having sat through endless faculty meetings where university cash flow and expenses were discussed ad nauseam, I'm convinced that at least here, we aren't being shafted, it's just that overhead costs are huge.
In fairness, if your school is like most, some very large percentage of the tuition and fees is paid using government grants and loans that wouldn't be made if they weren't subsidized and guaranteed by the government.And you have "know" idea what you're talking about. At small private universities like the one I work for, that government teat provides not enough milk to keep the place running. Tuition and materials fees provide the vast majority of the money the university spends to maintain the facilities and pay our salaries.
This.And you have "know" idea what you're talking about. At small private universities like the one I work for, that government teat provides not enough milk to keep the place running. Tuition and materials fees provide the vast majority of the money the university spends to maintain the facilities and pay our salaries.