T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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433.1 | Smile, and do whatever I tell you | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | I miss my vacation | Mon Aug 10 1987 15:02 | 6 |
| It has been my impression from my past 12 years at DEC, the last
7 as a secretary, that most managers think of their secretaries
as servants.
Lorna
|
433.2 | | CIPHER::VERGE | | Mon Aug 10 1987 15:37 | 13 |
| Let's look at this realistically. If a manager "allows" his secretary
to take some initiative, most will, I have noticed, start running
half the department, and do a damn good job of it. The smart managers
think of the secretary as a business woman (person), as the secretary
can and does make a big difference. Having done secretarial work
in the past for DEC, (10 years ago); I was fortunate to have worked
for managers who recognized my worth to the department. There are
those that don't, and it is unfortunate for both the manager and
the secretary. When we give secretaries the credit they deserve,
and pay they deserve, for truly being Business Woman, maybe more
folks will stay in the profession.
Val
|
433.3 | I AM a business woman | FAUXPA::ENO | Homesteader | Thu Aug 13 1987 13:26 | 19 |
| Flame on, high!
Yes, damn it. I am a business woman; I am a professional; I am
a highly educated, astute and competent person performing
administrative work. Just because the title DEC gives to the role
I fill is "secretary" doesn't give anyone the right to assume I
fetch coffee and do my nails all day. I am an integral part of
the business team I support.
Attitude like the one that calls secretaries "non-professionals"
or assumptions that secretaries are necessarily dumber than the
people they support are what keeps professionals like myself in
the financial dark ages, and allows kids from high school with no
skills or motivation to get the same level of respect that I do
(pretty low, except from people who know my work).
Flame off
Gloria
|
433.4 | | CHEFS::MAURER | Helen | Fri Aug 14 1987 13:36 | 24 |
| I've been a secretary for about 5 years now. I started because
it was the easiest type of work to find in Geneva (particularly since
I was able to apply as a bilingual secretary with knowledge of German
and Japanese). My priority was *living* in Europe, not career.
I did take care to choose my bosses well and, as a result, have been
rewarded with a higher than average degree of responsibility.
Everyone has their own idea of what a secretary is. This means
that the scope of any given secretarial job can vary widely from
the rest and is largely dependent on the attitude of the manager.
I resent the current, most widespread, attitude toward secretarial work
(that of "servant"), I resent that even I *almost* feel obliged to say
"I'm just a secretary" when asked what I do.
Because of the bad image of the word "secretary", people have taken
to creating new names (eg Personal Assistant, Admin Coordinator)
for essentially the same job in an effort to restore dignity
to the work. I understand the impetus for this but feel it is a
mistake. Better to change the image than to abandon the term.
Now, as to changing the image ... we need to be competent at and
proud of what we do.
|
433.5 | you're professional, I'm not | 3D::CHABOT | May these events not involve Thy servant | Tue Aug 18 1987 20:22 | 18 |
| My mother felt bad once because she was treated during Secretary
Week--"but I'm only a steno!" I think what she thought was a
"secretary" was what mostly get's called in personnel files a "admin
coordinator" (or whatever), but what most people think is a "secretary"
is a "stenographer". She felt bad because all she did was take
shorthand and type reports (and her typing wasn't up much over 100
wpm, or something just awful like that)...and enter reports into
the pc and retrieve data from the traffic computer and take the
detective's phone messages and file and also the normal things
we all do like work overtime without pay and share her baking and
cheery smile. (I'm pretty sure she doesn't make the coffee, though.)
If it's any consolation to the professional women there, software
engineering is not, strictly speaking, considered a professional
discipline. :-) It's still a dressed up word for programmer (grrrrrr)
and lacks official certifying exams and all those sorts of trappings
that real engineers can do. (Nor can I make a decent cup of coffee
without a menu.)
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