Fucking YES!!!!!
Nastassja-san,
Thank you for your application to work at Mori no Ike. As a dean of Mori no Ike, I am delighted that you are interested in working with us. I am responsible for hiring at the Concordia Language Village’s Japanese program in Dent, Minnesota from for the first half of the summer.
In order to assist in the selection process, I would appreciate if you would take some time to read through the attached document and reply to the questions. Your answers don’t have to be long. Once I hear back from you, I may choose to follow-up with a phone interview.
[...]
Ohenji o omachi shite orimasu!
Michael "Ryuuma" Rubida
Dean, Japanese Language Village
First Half (Dent, MN)
Concordia Language Villages
[...]
I was gonna write a long-ass entry on a bunch of other stuff, but right now... I'm too excited to even remember what all of that is!
The only thing tempering my excitement right now, though, is that I was sort-of kind-of offered a full-time job this summer at the golf course on the Saint Paul campus, and A) I am honestly a bit unsure whether I'd rather work full time during the entire summer with UDS, or work at Mori no Ike for seven (although at first I was thinking a "half" was more like three weeks, so it's not as bad now that I know it's a good chunk of the summer), and B) Steve, who's the manager for the golf course position, will probably get back to me about the specific hours and such well before I would hear the final word about Mori no Ike, meaning I'd have to get back to him well before then as well, which means... Either I'd most likely have to turn down the position at the golf course with the possibility of not getting hired at Mori no Ike at all, meaning I'd be back to doing catering all summer, or I'd have to lie to him and say I'm sure I can work the whole summer, and possibly have to tell him partway into the summer that I can't work anymore. Neither of the possibilities particularly thrill me.
But with my hopes of eventually becoming a C.A... I suppose the best thing for me to do would be to tell Steve the truth about this job possibility, hope he let's me stay on the schedule until I find out (maybe, maybe I could even find someone to "sub-let" my hours to for those seven weeks), and issho kenmei ganbaru on the rest of the Mori no Ike application process, realizing that I've already mostly passed the hurdle of them feeling that I'm qualified in terms of my resume and recommendations.
*crosses my fingers*
Okay, I might write more about the other stuff I wanted to talk about later this weekend, but for now I should probably get back to homeworking and such, especially since I just got up from a two-hour nap not long before I started typing this entry.
Nastassja-san,
Thank you for your application to work at Mori no Ike. As a dean of Mori no Ike, I am delighted that you are interested in working with us. I am responsible for hiring at the Concordia Language Village’s Japanese program in Dent, Minnesota from for the first half of the summer.
In order to assist in the selection process, I would appreciate if you would take some time to read through the attached document and reply to the questions. Your answers don’t have to be long. Once I hear back from you, I may choose to follow-up with a phone interview.
[...]
Ohenji o omachi shite orimasu!
Michael "Ryuuma" Rubida
Dean, Japanese Language Village
First Half (Dent, MN)
Concordia Language Villages
[...]
I was gonna write a long-ass entry on a bunch of other stuff, but right now... I'm too excited to even remember what all of that is!
The only thing tempering my excitement right now, though, is that I was sort-of kind-of offered a full-time job this summer at the golf course on the Saint Paul campus, and A) I am honestly a bit unsure whether I'd rather work full time during the entire summer with UDS, or work at Mori no Ike for seven (although at first I was thinking a "half" was more like three weeks, so it's not as bad now that I know it's a good chunk of the summer), and B) Steve, who's the manager for the golf course position, will probably get back to me about the specific hours and such well before I would hear the final word about Mori no Ike, meaning I'd have to get back to him well before then as well, which means... Either I'd most likely have to turn down the position at the golf course with the possibility of not getting hired at Mori no Ike at all, meaning I'd be back to doing catering all summer, or I'd have to lie to him and say I'm sure I can work the whole summer, and possibly have to tell him partway into the summer that I can't work anymore. Neither of the possibilities particularly thrill me.
But with my hopes of eventually becoming a C.A... I suppose the best thing for me to do would be to tell Steve the truth about this job possibility, hope he let's me stay on the schedule until I find out (maybe, maybe I could even find someone to "sub-let" my hours to for those seven weeks), and issho kenmei ganbaru on the rest of the Mori no Ike application process, realizing that I've already mostly passed the hurdle of them feeling that I'm qualified in terms of my resume and recommendations.
*crosses my fingers*
Okay, I might write more about the other stuff I wanted to talk about later this weekend, but for now I should probably get back to homeworking and such, especially since I just got up from a two-hour nap not long before I started typing this entry.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-06 12:03 am (UTC)As someone who occasionally is involved with hiring students for tasks, I can say that at least here, as long as a standard "quit the job two weeks" is given, we understand that sometimes people quit our usual boring "it's a job" clerical type tasks to take on other opportunities that will benefit their long term actual academic goals - it's just something that happens, and we're realistic about it. If they can introduce their friends, all the better :)
no subject
Date: 2007-05-06 04:06 am (UTC)1) That letter is by no means an indication that you're accepted or even half-way there.
2) Of the strategies you mentioned - this is the best one (btw I'm glad you thought out different scenarios, it's a really good habit):
"I'd have to lie to him and say I'm sure I can work the whole summer, and possibly have to tell him partway into the summer that I can't work anymore."
It happens far more often than you might think.
3) Don't tell anyone at all about the potential job opportunity.
gl,
- Michel
no subject
Date: 2007-05-06 04:10 am (UTC)And yes, I know that it may not even mean I'm a quarter of the way towards getting the job, but I'm still happy that I got farther with the Japanese camp than with the German or English camps.
Also, I'd like to thank you again for helping me with my application. :)
no subject
Date: 2007-05-06 07:47 am (UTC)Juggling applications for possible, desirable jobs and schedules for definite, alright jobs can definitely be a pain in the rear; I've definitely gotten burned before both ways trying to figure out whether I should accept Job B right away or wait for more word on Job A with CLV the past couple summers, so I won't try to offer any advice on when you should accept one job or the other or hold out a bit longer until you can get more information on the likelihood of things going one way or the other. The good news is that if you present yourself well in your written responses and get to do the phone interview with him, Ryuuma will probably get back to you pretty quickly on whether he'll offer you a position or not, since it's getting close to the start of the CLV summer calendar.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-06 05:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-06 08:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-06 09:36 pm (UTC)