This is an incredible story! Have you asked her parent's why they treat her like this and will they accept counseling? Can she be removed from the environment?
You already have your foot in the door. Become an engineer, go to engineer school.You are right, and thus an employees wages are based on the allocation of limited resources, which at that point morals of an employer determine a lot.
My wife is in accounting school currently. After that, I plan on going back to school, but obviously my situation has constraints. I have taken a business class as well as a business ethics class and an accounting class. I have 54 credits through Penn State, but after switching my major a bunch and going through a pot smoking phase, I dropped out (my GPA remains around a 3.3). But, just like anything else, I have to make a long series of good choices if I ever wish to get back into school and further, I have to make far better choices than I previously did if I ever get back into school.
Without family values and support to succeed - even the brightest will struggle.
One student I am working with has parents who laugh at her ambitions whenever she's done well if I talk to her about going off to University. 95% of my pastoral support tutorials with her are about rebuilding her confidence. She'll pass this year but whether she stays on and passes the final year to go to University will be down to her parent's attitudes and support.
I can't be blunt with them I'm afraid - the only thing I can do is work with her to keep her confidence and ambitions up. her parents are farmers and we are up in the North where a lot of women still end up living gender assigned / defined lives.
It is frustrating at times but I have to work with them and her, if she goes on to be more than just someone's wife on a farm here then I will have achieved something.
You already have your foot in the door. Become an engineer, go to engineer school.
Driving the train. Don't you work for the railroad? Engineers make really good money.What kind of engineer?
And so they should, after having to work all the live long day!Driving the train. Don't you work for the railroad? Engineers make really good money.
Driving the train. Don't you work for the railroad? Engineers make really good money.
So, if we pick the schools and filter out the underachievers, like China does, we will be #1!
You are right, and thus an employees wages are based on the allocation of limited resources, which at that point morals of an employer determine a lot.
My wife is in accounting school currently. After that, I plan on going back to school, but obviously my situation has constraints. I have taken a business class as well as a business ethics class and an accounting class. I have 54 credits through Penn State, but after switching my major a bunch and going through a pot smoking phase, I dropped out (my GPA remains around a 3.3). But, just like anything else, I have to make a long series of good choices if I ever wish to get back into school and further, I have to make far better choices than I previously did if I ever get back into school.
Oh, yeah that's the end goal if I stay with the railroad. It's the next logical step. They really don't make that great of money, though. It's only because of the 60 hours plus a week that their pay ends up looking decent.
Without family values and support to succeed - even the brightest will struggle.
One student I am working with has parents who laugh at her ambitions whenever she's done well if I talk to her about going off to University. 95% of my pastoral support tutorials with her are about rebuilding her confidence. She'll pass this year but whether she stays on and passes the final year to go to University will be down to her parent's attitudes and support.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?