The office environment:
1)
What are your work hours; how are you
supervised.
a)
I have alternating work hours based on whether
or not I am working that evening at my paying job. This week, I worked 9-5 on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and 9-2 on
Tuesday and Friday. Next week it will be the same, but different for week 3.
Mona and I work in close proximity. She’ll delegate a task to me, and once I’m
done it to my satisfaction, I’ll print it, stamp DRAFT on it, and let her
review and make corrections as needed.
2) Describe
your work area.
a)
I have the desk that closest to the door. I have
a phone that I have not been given leave to answer, and a modern computer that
doesn’t have DivorceMate or any of the other legal programs. I have the
necessary tools ie. StickyNotes, highlighters, pens, stapler, paperclips etc.
all within easy reach.
3) Describe
your daily routine.
a)
I’m in the door by 8:45 am. If I have nothing I’ve
been working on since the day before, then I will file any paperwork that’s in the
tray on Mona’s desk. After that, I do whatever is delegated to me.
4) How
is work initiated? Is it dictated, written out in longhand, sent to you by
email or do you write your own correspondence, emails, etc.
a)
So far, Mona will just randomly ask me to do
something. If it’s something new (like the disclosure) then she’ll give me some
extra instructions. Most of the tasks she gives me is filing, scanning, and
copying aside from whatever client I’m working on.
5) Have
you done anything this week you particularly enjoyed or did not enjoy.
a)
I did enjoy going through the huge Respondent’s
disclosure because I handled a lot of different documents and, basically, I was
given leave to be as creative with the Excel Worksheet as I wanted. I did not
particularly enjoy copying and scanning that smaller disclosure simply because
it was a very frustrating hour or so.
6) Do
you check voicemail? Do you record your own voicemail greeting? Do
you answer the telephone?
a)
Because of the way the computers are set up,
there really is no reason for me to answer the phone because 98% of the phone
calls are clients trying to book appointments, and since I can’t view Amicus on
my computer, I wouldn’t know what availability Heather had. I have no separate
phone line, so I couldn’t record my own voicemail.
School-related reflection:
1)
In some courses, in place of exams,
you have had quizzes, tests and portfolios. These were often completed
outside of class, allowing you the opportunity to review your textbook and
other resources. Upon submission, you received instant feedback.
Would you have preferred an exam instead of the smaller, more frequent
tests/quizzes/portfolio? Did the quizzes/tests/ portfolios assist
you in learning the theory? Explain your answer.
a)
I prefer the smaller tests because you’re not
trying to cram half a semester’s worth of information into your head only to
forget half of it once the pressure of completing the exam gets to you. I enjoyed
making the portfolios because it forces you to be as correct as you can be when
creating the document, thus making the theory you learned apply more than if
you just learned it and not done anything with it.
2) Was
it helpful to have answer keys on the bulletin board?
a)
Yes, because I was able to look at the answers I
had wrong, see the correct answer and have a lightbulb go off that says ‘I
actually did know that answer, I just second guessed myself and used a
different answer.’ I don’t know if that applies for everyone else, but that’s
how my brain works.
Hi Maryrose
ReplyDeleteAre you working at a desk with DivorceMate now?
No I am not. I've not been able to use any of the programs we've been learning on. But I spoke with Sandy, and she has agreed to let me use the program on her computer - it's not that I've not been using DivorceMate documents, I've just not been able to use the program because the computer I'm stationed at does not have.
ReplyDelete