Wednesday, 22 February 2017

Week 3, Post 1

1. Give examples of oral and written communication used in your work placement.  Did you draft your own communications?  Are you using 'clean formatting'?  Are you using Outlook.  If so, what features are you using?

a. They don’t really use precedents like I am used to from school. They go into the correspondence file for the client, choose a letter that looks vaguely like the one you need to write, save it as the new date and a brief description of what’s in the letter, then finish writing the letter. There’s no blank letterhead like at school. I do draft my own communications, but I am required (reasonably) to submit it for review with Sandy or Heather before I can finalize it. For Outlook, the only real features we use is the attachment and the signature at the end of the email.

2. Provide an example of a problem you encountered and describe how you solved it.

a. I had a real estate appraisal disclosure from the respondent that I had to copy and scan into the system for our electronic files but the paper jammed a couple times. I didn’t have time to rectify it that day but I did the next day; I went page by page through the copy and compared it to the original. While I was doing this, I realized I was only missing 10-15 pages for the one tab, but everything else was perfect. So I simply just recopied the original documents that I was missing, slotted them in, made sure everything was 100% before binding both the original and the copy.

3. Are you using a To-Do List/notebook to prioritize your work to meet deadlines.

a. I have not been given a client to complete from start to finish, so I’ve simply been doing the work that has been handed to me.

4. What is one of your weaknesses?  How did you overcome this in your work placement?

a. I get very anxious/nervous, so whenever someone gives me instructions, it feels like it just goes in one ear and out of the other. I made myself breathe while I was given instructions, and I also actively listened to what was being told to me. I am still not perfect by far, but it’s better.

5. Provide recommendations for refinements to the curriculum (i.e. are there specific elements we should spend more time on to better prepare you for the work place).  What is right about the curriculum?  What needs to be improved upon?  Which courses did you prefer - explain why.  Which courses did you not prefer - explain why.

a. I really don’t think this should be a two year course, I think it should be longer. The fact we only briefly touched on personal injury litigation when there’s so many potential employers in the Tri-City alone speaks for itself. Family law should be a whole year, considering we only briefly touched on that as well. I enjoyed family law because it was a field I was determined to work in after the fact, and because it was quite comprehensive this time around instead of the first time I took the course. I didn’t like corporate because it was rather boring; necessary, but boring.

7. How will you continue to learn and develop professionally?


a. If I happen to work at a firm that offers to pay for continued education of their employees, I would take advantage of that. The law is always changing, and though I have no wish to be a lawyer, I do want to understand the area of law better.

3 comments:

  1. Hi Maryrose - oh my you have been doing so much! Why did your placement start so much sooner than most of ours are starting, if you don't mind me asking?

    I find that I have the same anxiousness when I am given instructions, and have to have a pad of paper and a pen with me all the time whether at my desk or away from it when in conversation with anyone giving me instructions. Do you think you might find that a help too, or do you feel there might not be opportunity to use it as they speak too fast? You don't mention it here I don't think so I thought I would ask :)

    I agree with you SO MUCH on the issue of especially Family Law needing to be longer. A year sounds about right. Also, the idea of this whole course being longer sounds wonderful to me. I interviewed Trios college before I decided on Conestoga and sat in on one of their classes. Their equivalent course to our Office Administration - Legal course is only one year long! I chose Conestoga as I found out through talking with lawyers that they would hesitate to take on anyone who didn't have two years' minimum of years at school in this field. However, I would have gladly signed up for the course all over again had I know that it was three years' long!

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  2. Hi Emma! So sorry it took so long to get back to your reply.

    I started my placement sooner because I retook FL; I didn't learn it as well as I had wanted to and Family Law was the field I wanted to start my career in (hence Caron Family Law).

    I also had considered Trios College but Conestoga college had a better success and employment after graduation rate; plus, I met so many cool people there that I still call friends to this day.

    As for me writing down the dictation of what my senior assistant was telling me, I really think that having the opportunity to learn short hand would have come in handy simply because there's only so much writing I can do as they speak so quickly. I did take down notes, but she would always start before I even realized she was giving me instructions. Very much a "Think fast!" kind of deal.

    I would like to think that I would continue to take evening courses at Conestoga to learn more about the law because it is a very intriguing subject.

    Hope you're doing well!

    Regards,

    Maryrose

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    Replies
    1. I am doing very well, and loved reading your reply :)

      I am finding the same with dictation and the need for shorthand! I really need to learn it, and may teach myself at home if I can find some spare minutes. Also I want to go and do the Law Clerk program part time, or perhaps online.

      Maybe I will see you back at school again sometime xx

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