T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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588.1 | Do the right thing | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney | Fri Aug 05 1988 09:47 | 7 |
| Could you let us know, if the employee has done what's consistent with
Digital policy and culture, namely has the employee approached his (or
her) line management and personnel management and fully persued this
through the Open Door Policy?
If you want an opinion of what's "fair", you'll proabably get a
hundred of 'em here as replies.
|
588.2 | DEC coops preferred, not vice versa | MANTIS::FULLERTON | Jean Fullerton (MLO) | Mon Aug 08 1988 21:22 | 18 |
| As a hiring manager, I have made offers to coops that worked at DEC
prior to graduating. These offers were as Wage Class 4 positions,
at significantly higher salaries than are paid to coops, as "New College
Hire" offers.
This is not only standard practice, but encouraged. Coops that stay
with Digital (those who receive an offer and accept), receive some
credit for their coop service in terms of benefits like vacation time
(see Policies and Procedures). Digital values a coops DEC experience.
It is my understanding that a 'college hire' is someone that has
recently graduated from college (internal or external) that has
not worked in the field for another company since graduation.
For groups under Jack Smith, have your personnel rep contact Jane Goring
(College Relations) for an official definition, and answers on this
entire topic.
|
588.3 | Corporate Definition of New College Hire | MARMAT::JERRY | Perfessor Quintessence | Fri Aug 19 1988 18:41 | 77 |
|
I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Date: 19-Aug-1988 07:55pm EDT
From: ALAN MERRY @CFO
MERRY.ALAN AT A1 AT BARTLE AT CFO
Dept: CORP COLLEGE RELATIONS
Tel No: 251-1398
TO: See Below
Subject: Corporate Definition of New College Graduate
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
| D | I | G | I | T | A | L | I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
TO: Deanna Sklenak DATE: 15 August 1988
FROM: Alan Merry, Manager
CC: @Staff DEPT: Corporate College Relations
@CPM ADDR: CF02-1/K75
TEL: 251-1398
SUBJECT: Corporate Definition of New College Graduate
The corporate definition of a new college graduate for purposes of
tracking number of hires is:
Any individual who is signed up as a full time exempt employee no
later than twelve months from the date of graduation. The spirit of
the college hiring program is that the individual possess an
accredited degree which meets the needs of the business in his/her
professional positions. The exception regarding timeframe after
graduation would be the individual who enrolled in the armed services
directly after graduation. In this instance, they would be
considered a new college graduate if they signed up no later than
twelve months from date of separation. The overlying assumption is
that the potential employee serve the minimum time after graduation
necessary to fulfill their military obligation.
Distribution:
TO: DEANNA SKLENAK @MLO
CC: CAROLYN SIMMONS @CFO
CC: VICKI KIRKPATRICK @CFO
CC: JANET COLLINS @CFO
CC: DEV GLASER @CFO
CC: MAEJIM FIELDS @CFO ( FIELDS.MAEJIM AT A1 AT BARTLE AT CFO )
CC: RICK AINSLIE @MRO
CC: JANET BECK @MLO
CC: JERRY COX @ACO
CC: DEV GLASER @CFO
CC: JANE GORING @MLO
CC: GEORGE LEACH @HLO
CC: BOB CLARK @MSO
CC: CHARLENE PLOTKIN @VRO
CC: CAROLYN SIMMONS @CFO
CC: MARY TETRO @HLO
CC: BRENDA ROWLAND @OGO
CC: GOSSELIN@AK0V02@VAXMAIL
CC: RUDIN@NUGGET@VAXMAIL
CC: ALAN MERRY @CFO ( MERRY.ALAN AT A1 AT BARTLE AT CFO )
CC: MAEJIM FIELDS @CFO ( FIELDS.MAEJIM AT A1 AT BARTLE AT CFO )
|
588.4 | Moved by moderator | PIWACT::KLEINBERGER | Dont worry, Be happy | Tue Aug 23 1988 10:14 | 38 |
|
================================================================================
Note XXX.1 Corp Definition of New College Graduate 1 of 3
XCUSME::KING "Give me a Challenge" 5 lines 20-AUG-1988 06:36
-< Current employees >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How does this affect a current employee who graduates from college
while working for DEC? Will they be considered a new college graduate
if they apply for a position they had trained for in college?
Bryan
================================================================================
Note XXX.2 Corp Definition of New College Graduate 2 of 3
EAGLE1::EGGERS "Tom, 293-5358, VAX Architecture" 3 lines 20-AUG-1988 20:13
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
That's what the words say. I think it provides an opportunity, for
those who need or want it, to improve their title or salary to match
those of new college hires. It seems very reasonable to me.
================================================================================
Note XXX.3 Corp Definition of New College Graduate 3 of 3
MARMAT::JERRY "Perfessor Quintessence" 11 lines 22-AUG-1988 12:38
-< All new college hire need to apply.... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re. XXX.1.
It means that as a digital employee who has recently graduated from
college/university, you can apply for a job within an organization
as a "college new hire".
The problem I have found is that some groups in DEC only consider
someone who is straight from school, low twenties in age, no or little
DEC experience, and with a sheep skin - as only new college hire.
|
588.5 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Tue Aug 23 1988 11:34 | 9 |
| Re: .3
One problem with the definition in .3 is that it doesn't account for
people with ABD degrees (All But Dissertation). That is, people who
work on a Ph. D. for several years, getting a Master's early in the
process, but never completing the Ph. D. This is a relatively common
occurrence, and we should be quite willing to hire such people.
Gary
|
588.6 | Is .5's scenario really a problem? | DR::BLINN | I'll buy that for a dollar! | Tue Aug 23 1988 14:17 | 13 |
| I believe (I may be mistaken) that the "new college hire" program
is targeted specifically at people with undergraduate degrees,
not at people with advanced degrees and graduate work.
Also, I believe that any groups that are discriminating against
older college graduates, particularly those who may have work
experience in addition to a recent college degree (as reply .4
claims happens) is not in the best interest of Digital, but that's
just my opinion. And I believe that discriminating against older
people in general is not in Digital's best interest. I certainly
hope it isn't happening.
Tom
|
588.7 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, 293-5358, VAX Architecture | Tue Aug 23 1988 17:11 | 4 |
| Re .6:
"Discriminating against older people in general" is certainly
"not in Digital's best interest." Not only that, it's illegal.
|
588.8 | Am I about to be a new college hire? | MJG::GRIER | In search of a real name... | Tue Aug 23 1988 18:07 | 13 |
|
This is interesting to me, because in December, I'll be graduating
with my B.S. in Mathematics, and I've been working at DEC during
the entire process (4 years in Sept.) Other persons (my parents)
have expressed concern that if after I've graduated, I'll be
"restricted" to the limitations of the new college graduate status,
losing the privileges/rights of 4 years internal experience.
Does this affect me in that way?
-mjg
|
588.9 | Be careful in your expectations | REGENT::GETTYS | Bob Gettys N1BRM 223-6897 | Wed Aug 24 1988 10:47 | 40 |
| At worst the "new college hire" that has been working
for DEC for a number of years should be treated like a co-op
student. It actually should help.
My experience (back in 1975):
I hired in as a technician with an Associate degree from
Wentworth Institute (a local tech oriented two year school at
that time - well respected) and about three years (out of five) of
undergraduate work at Northeastern University (I was still going
nights). When I got my degree, I was promoted to Engineer with an
appropriate salary increase.
The applicability of your degree to your immediate work
is obviously going to make a big difference to what happens to
your position and/or salary. If your group cannot use your
degree skills, then maybe you need to look for one that can and
get the right job.
There obviously isn't going to be a single formula that
can (or should) apply to all cases. This is something that you
will need to take up with your management and personel as needed
to get you what you think you are worth. Also remember that you
didn't suddenly get all your added knowledge and skills on the
day you graduated, you acquired them over time, and if you were
in the right job, have already been using them. Thus it is
possible that you are already in the job that you belong in, and
are also already being properly rewarded for your skills.
Getting that degree may not be a big event to your boss,
especially if you have received good to excellent ratings over
the last few raise periods. He may feel that he has already
rewarded you for your efforts and that the degree is merely
confirmation of that achievment.
Don't read to much negativity into these statements.
Merely try to see where you really are in relation to the real
world. I was a tech and should have been an engineer, so the
promotion and raise was appropriate. You may already be in the
right position and thus no big change can occur.
/s/ Bob
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588.10 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Thu Aug 25 1988 11:13 | 12 |
| Re: .5, .6, .7
Sorry. I was taking the definition of college hire out of the current
context and applying it to a different problem. Namely, who can
we hire when there's a hiring freeze on and only college hiring
is allowed.
This is close to home for me, because I was hired during such a freeze
as a "college hire" shortly after my third pass at my dissertation was
rejected and I realized I didn't really want to be an academic anyway.
Gary
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