So I'm currently doing temp work for a correspondence community college (closest US equivalent to the term I can think of) involving data entry and processing enrolments.
I've flipped between two departments, one is the "support" team (who handles the actual enrolments and makes sure that people actually qualify for the course they're doing), the other is "basic education" (so people with poor literacy/numeracy skills can do courses to bring them up to high school graduate level-the people in these courses are typically people who did not finish high school for one reason or another or migrants who haven't been in Australia for very long).
Some of the bitching I have heard from the departments over the last two weeks however, makes me mad . Mostly because I fall into the categories they're bitching about. (To make things short, I have an anxiety disorder and have been forced to retrain as a result-I can't go back into childcare, so I'm looking at office work. I figure with this one, if I can get into a "small-medium" sized place, my anxiety is not likely to have major flare-ups if I opt to do reception work. The place I'm at is huge, but I'm also only part of a small department, so me screwing up only affects the department and can be fixed.)
Now, to sum it up, in my state, most training courses through us are subsidised by the government. How much of a subsidy you get depends on your previous qualifications, your age, whether or not you are taking an apprenticeship/traineeship (the difference boils down to the name-literally), if you are Indigenous or not and if you have a disability or not. The criteria is slightly tricky, but for a number of qualifications:
-If you have not completed anything higher than the qualification you are planning on studying at any time, you will be subsidised. The cost depends on how many qualifications you have. (So second courses are slightly cheaper?)
-If you are Indigenous (and can prove it), you are fully subsidised (as in, you pay nothing)
-If you are disabled AND you are taking on the course in order to retrain, you may or may not qualify for a full subsidy, depending on your background and a few other factors. (Disability over here includes psychiatric illnesses, so theoretically I would qualify)
-For certain higher qualifications, the previous qualification rule does not apply, but the other rules still do.
-If you are unemployed and/or on government benefits, you will get HEAVILY subsidised for a training course depending on the course-the previous qualification rule still applies.
I've come across a number of people lately who seem to have issues with all of these and the bitching is just...ugh. We don't even deal with these people face-to-face, we deal with them over the phone or via email. You don't know their full story, you do not have a right to judge why they are doing a certain course.
Examples of bitching I have heard:
-Apparently people who have mental health issues should not study "aged care" courses. (the issue with this is more that the person in question believed that those people just wanted free handouts. I shut her up by pointing out that it depends on the degree of disability. Thankfully she was moved AWAY from me after that)
-Someone who was studying teaching but kept dropping out after 2 years (as in she'd enrol, drop out, enrol drop out) of study wanted to enrol in a course we offer that would enable her to teach basic literacy and numeracy skills to adults. The reason? Apparently she was "child-phobic." The following rant from this lady had me going at this and I very nearly asked to be moved back to my original section.
-Another one had someone submitting 2 applications, where they had claimed they weren't Indigenous on one, but had done so on another one. Again, apparently this person just wanted a free handout.
You don't know the full story, so what fucking right do you have to judge others?!
As for me, I am planning on retraining in another field, in my case it's Business Admin. I plan on undertaking a legal focus for the course if I can purely for the reason of having more job options open to me and that's it. I'm also getting help for my anxiety and learning how to manage it. I have contacted an employment service provider however, to help me make this decision. If they say "do the generic option" then I will. If they think I can handle the legal option, I will. They have a better grasp of my full story and can make that judgement accordingly.
I've flipped between two departments, one is the "support" team (who handles the actual enrolments and makes sure that people actually qualify for the course they're doing), the other is "basic education" (so people with poor literacy/numeracy skills can do courses to bring them up to high school graduate level-the people in these courses are typically people who did not finish high school for one reason or another or migrants who haven't been in Australia for very long).
Some of the bitching I have heard from the departments over the last two weeks however, makes me mad . Mostly because I fall into the categories they're bitching about. (To make things short, I have an anxiety disorder and have been forced to retrain as a result-I can't go back into childcare, so I'm looking at office work. I figure with this one, if I can get into a "small-medium" sized place, my anxiety is not likely to have major flare-ups if I opt to do reception work. The place I'm at is huge, but I'm also only part of a small department, so me screwing up only affects the department and can be fixed.)
Now, to sum it up, in my state, most training courses through us are subsidised by the government. How much of a subsidy you get depends on your previous qualifications, your age, whether or not you are taking an apprenticeship/traineeship (the difference boils down to the name-literally), if you are Indigenous or not and if you have a disability or not. The criteria is slightly tricky, but for a number of qualifications:
-If you have not completed anything higher than the qualification you are planning on studying at any time, you will be subsidised. The cost depends on how many qualifications you have. (So second courses are slightly cheaper?)
-If you are Indigenous (and can prove it), you are fully subsidised (as in, you pay nothing)
-If you are disabled AND you are taking on the course in order to retrain, you may or may not qualify for a full subsidy, depending on your background and a few other factors. (Disability over here includes psychiatric illnesses, so theoretically I would qualify)
-For certain higher qualifications, the previous qualification rule does not apply, but the other rules still do.
-If you are unemployed and/or on government benefits, you will get HEAVILY subsidised for a training course depending on the course-the previous qualification rule still applies.
I've come across a number of people lately who seem to have issues with all of these and the bitching is just...ugh. We don't even deal with these people face-to-face, we deal with them over the phone or via email. You don't know their full story, you do not have a right to judge why they are doing a certain course.
Examples of bitching I have heard:
-Apparently people who have mental health issues should not study "aged care" courses. (the issue with this is more that the person in question believed that those people just wanted free handouts. I shut her up by pointing out that it depends on the degree of disability. Thankfully she was moved AWAY from me after that)
-Someone who was studying teaching but kept dropping out after 2 years (as in she'd enrol, drop out, enrol drop out) of study wanted to enrol in a course we offer that would enable her to teach basic literacy and numeracy skills to adults. The reason? Apparently she was "child-phobic." The following rant from this lady had me going at this and I very nearly asked to be moved back to my original section.
-Another one had someone submitting 2 applications, where they had claimed they weren't Indigenous on one, but had done so on another one. Again, apparently this person just wanted a free handout.
You don't know the full story, so what fucking right do you have to judge others?!
As for me, I am planning on retraining in another field, in my case it's Business Admin. I plan on undertaking a legal focus for the course if I can purely for the reason of having more job options open to me and that's it. I'm also getting help for my anxiety and learning how to manage it. I have contacted an employment service provider however, to help me make this decision. If they say "do the generic option" then I will. If they think I can handle the legal option, I will. They have a better grasp of my full story and can make that judgement accordingly.
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