Jim Katen Posted May 18, 2007 Report Posted May 18, 2007 Quote Originally posted by Scottpat Quote . . . Hey, I don't make ASHI policy. I'm just reporting what I know. As I stated one might be able to get around it. I don't blame you. It's just a dumb policy. Quote From a logical point of view, if an education program that is for profit is endorsed by ASHI for CE hours for its membership then logically attendance will increase and the provider will make more money. The providers don't pay the ASHI extortion fee; the students do through higher fees. This is basic economics. Charging providers to gain CE approval is stupid (Randy, don't let your kids read this) and mercenary. It provides no substantial benefit to ASHI and it smacks of pride. - Jim Katen, Oregon
hausdok Posted May 18, 2007 Report Posted May 18, 2007 Here's the way I see it. If ASHI insists on extorting money from education providers, by holding back CEU's from its members, then the providers will simply go to the other associations and obtain CEU endorsement for free. ASHI will end up being odd man out, thinking that its done something clever while its members are asking themselves what they're paying dues for if their association is still stuck in a mid-20th century mentality. OT - OF!!! M.
randynavarro Posted May 18, 2007 Report Posted May 18, 2007 Thanks for clarifying, Scott. I understand better now but still do not agree with it. In fact, I again echo Jim's sentiment.
Bonnie Trenga Posted May 18, 2007 Report Posted May 18, 2007 Not to be a nerd, but my only comment (other than if you want me to contact Mr Long, I will) is that you've misused it's and its! Arrg!
hausdok Posted May 18, 2007 Report Posted May 18, 2007 Yeah, you're right Bonnie (Of course you are!). I went back and fixed it. I do it all the time but it's not that I don't know which is which. It's that I type pretty fast and sort of unconsciously slam whatever sound comes into my head onto the paper. It's second nature and I usually have to go back through my reports and correct it. I do the same thing with their and they're. I mean to type they're (they are), but I'm typing so fast that I just type what comes naturally and the possessive 'their' is what comes out. For instance, whenever I'm on a roll and mean to say 'ours' I'll often type 'hours'. It's like I've got a screwed up voice recognition program in my head that's attached to my fingers. I think I could learn to stop most of it if I could learn not to type with contractions, but I bet I'd still plug in other synonyms anyway. What's funny is that back in the day I'd sit there typing investigative summaries late at night, when I'd pull a 24 hour watch as duty investigator, get drowsy and nod off at my Underwood, typing whatever came into my head as I dozed off. That'd happen all night long - hour after hour. Sometimes I wouldn't proofread my stuff very carefully and the PM would call me in the next morning and ask me to explain stuff that I'd typed that made absolutely no sense. ONE TEAM - ONE FIGHT!!! M.
Les Posted May 18, 2007 Report Posted May 18, 2007 I'm in. Don't need the ceu's. Do need the education. Can't hurt. Might be embarrasing.
kurt Posted May 18, 2007 Report Posted May 18, 2007 Quote Originally posted by hausdok Here's the way I see it. If ASHI insists on extorting money from education providers, by holding back CEU's from its members, then the providers will simply go to the other associations and obtain CEU endorsement for free. ASHI will end up being odd man out, thinking that its done something clever while its members are asking themselves what they're paying dues for if their association is still stuck in a mid-20th century mentality. OT - OF!!! M. Yup.
Bonnie Trenga Posted May 25, 2007 Report Posted May 25, 2007 Hello everyone. In case you weren't aware, you are now able to sign up for the writing class on the Sentence Sleuth forum area. I'm looking forward to the class starting in 11 days! You can also ask me any question about writing, style or grammar at the Ask the Sentence Sleuth area. Bonnie
hausdok Posted May 25, 2007 Report Posted May 25, 2007 Come on, Guys! Recess is over. Let's get signed up! (Let me see - did I spell check that? Hmmm.) OT - OF!!! M.
Bonnie Trenga Posted May 29, 2007 Report Posted May 29, 2007 Calling Mr Leslie VanAlstine, Mr Brad Manor, Mr Jim Morrison and Mr Chad Fabry! And two other willing participants! I hope you had a great three-day weekend (assuming you didn't work). May I remind you that starting a week from today is the first Sentence Sleuth Writing Workshop, starring... YOU! (And me, a little.) We need you to sign up in the Sentence Sleuth forum area. It's just $125 for seven weeks of luscious learning. I promise it won't be dull. DevWave is making it easy for you by allowing you to pay by credit card. Thanks, DevWave! I look forward to hearing from all of you! Bonnie, AKA The Sentence Sleuth
hausdok Posted May 30, 2007 Report Posted May 30, 2007 Hi All, Don't know if any of you noticed, but this thread became the basis for an article in this month's issue of Working RE which is put out by our sponsor OREP. For those of you who have member's access to their website, here 'tis! http://www.workingre.com/mms/writing-is-hard.asp Otherwise, you can read it in Working RE. Oh, and Bonnie, The Curious Case got mentioned too. OT - OF!!! M.
Bonnie Trenga Posted May 31, 2007 Report Posted May 31, 2007 Hello from Bonnie. Several guys have said that time is a problem for them, and that's why they can't sign up for the class. I imagine it would take students 30 to 60 minutes a day. That's not that much time. Watch one less sitcom or skip the sports section? Do your lesson on the john? Possible? Would you prefer not to study for seven weeks but some other time frame, such as one month? I want to make this accessible to everyone with the least amount of headaches for everyone, so I'm asking you all to please let me know what changes to my suggested curriculum you want. Thanks for your time, and I hope to be light-heartedly correcting you all soon!
Brandon Chew Posted July 4, 2007 Report Posted July 4, 2007 Hello Bonnie! I was in the class of 1984. I see that you have found a welcome home here at TIJ. I've been on a several-month haitus from the message boards and I'm just now catching up. I'm curious. How did you find your way here? Are you like me, and were you a moth in a previous life? In this life I seem to be inexplicably drawn to bright lights -- and TIJ seems to have some of the brightest around. Or maybe it's the odd collection of goofballs... Brandon Quote Originally posted by Bonnie Trenga Hi Brandon and others who want to write better reports. I'm Bonnie Trenga, author of "The Curious Case of the Misplaced Modifier," a book you seemed to have enjoyed and mentioned in a post here. I noticed you were a Cornellian. Me too. Class of 1991. You? Anyway, if any inspectors would like to chat about writing or grammar, please e-mail me at curiouscase@hotmail.com or post a note here. Thanks, Bonnie
SonOfSwamp Posted July 4, 2007 Report Posted July 4, 2007 Quote Originally posted by hausdok Yeah, you're right Bonnie (Of course you are!). I went back and fixed it. I do it all the time but it's not that I don't know which is which. It's that I type pretty fast and sort of unconsciously slam whatever sound comes into my head onto the paper. It's second nature and I usually have to go back through my reports and correct it. I do the same thing with their and they're. I mean to type they're (they are), but I'm typing so fast that I just type what comes naturally and the possessive 'their' is what comes out. For instance, whenever I'm on a roll and mean to say 'ours' I'll often type 'hours'. I find this fascinating. Seriously. A lot of people do what you describe. Usually, when I make a typing error, I type in a random word that has nothing to do with what I'm writing about. Funny how the brain works. Question: Do you look at the keyboard when you type, or do you look at the screen? WJ
Bonnie Trenga Posted July 4, 2007 Report Posted July 4, 2007 Quote Originally posted by Brandon Chew Hello Bonnie! I was in the class of 1984. I see that you have found a welcome home here at TIJ. I've been on a several-month haitus from the message boards and I'm just now catching up. I'm curious. How did you find your way here? Are you like me, and were you a moth in a previous life? In this life I seem to be inexplicably drawn to bright lights -- and TIJ seems to have some of the brightest around. Or maybe it's the odd collection of goofballs... Brandon Quote Originally posted by Bonnie Trenga Hi Brandon and others who want to write better reports. I'm Bonnie Trenga, author of "The Curious Case of the Misplaced Modifier," a book you seemed to have enjoyed and mentioned in a post here. I noticed you were a Cornellian. Me too. Class of 1991. You? Anyway, if any inspectors would like to chat about writing or grammar, please e-mail me at curiouscase@hotmail.com or post a note here. Thanks, Bonnie Hey Brandon. I just Googled myself and the TIJ forum was one of the hits. I think this is a fascinating place, and I'm happy that you inspector dudes want to improve your writing! I, too, enjoy the goofy guys. They seem to have an excellent sense of humor. Brandon, in case you didn't know, there's a new area of the forum, called Ask the Sentence Sleuth (me), where you can ask a writing-related question. Hope to see you there for some face time. Been back to Ithaca lately? I last went a couple years ago. Son of Swamp (what the heck does that name mean, anyway?), I don't think how you type matters; just how you proofread. Be suspicious of everything. That's how I find errors. You guys must take the same tack when you're checking a house. You don't assume everything is fine with the house, right? Same with writing. Assume it's wrong, and many times you'll be right.
hausdok Posted July 4, 2007 Report Posted July 4, 2007 Hi Walter, I look at the screen. Hell, if I looked at the keyboard, I wouldn't know here to find anything. I know exactly where the G and the H keys are. Once I place my hands on either side of those, I just take off. One thing I really wish I could train myself to do, though, is to use the shortcut keys the way you do. I still only know a couple. There should be a shortcut key typing course like the Mavis Beacon course, so that old farts like myself can learn that stuff and wean ourselves away from the mouse. OT - OF!!! M.
SonOfSwamp Posted July 4, 2007 Report Posted July 4, 2007 Quote Originally posted by hausdok Hi Walter, I look at the screen. Hell, if I looked at the keyboard, I wouldn't know here to find anything. I know exactly where the G and the H keys are. Once I place my hands on either side of those, I just take off. One thing I really wish I could train myself to do, though, is to use the shortcut keys the way you do. I still only know a couple. There should be a shortcut key typing course like the Mavis Beacon course, so that old farts like myself can learn that stuff and wean ourselves away from the mouse. OT - OF!!! M. Well, that goes my little theory. I was thinking that looking at the screen would prompt a keyboarder to see the mistakes and fix them in real time. I figured keyboard-lookers wouldn't notice the mistakes hidden under their fingertips. As for keyboard shortcuts: you can find them in Windows help, or just Google them. Learn one at a time, starting with the ones that move the cursor a word at a time, a line at a time, a paragraph at a time. The shortcuts shave a whole lot of time off typing... Use the arrow keys for scrolling. Faster, and better for your wrists/fingers. WJ
Brandon Chew Posted July 5, 2007 Report Posted July 5, 2007 Quote Originally posted by Bonnie Trenga Hey Brandon. I just Googled myself and the TIJ forum was one of the hits. I think this is a fascinating place, and I'm happy that you inspector dudes want to improve your writing! I, too, enjoy the goofy guys. They seem to have an excellent sense of humor. Brandon, in case you didn't know, there's a new area of the forum, called Ask the Sentence Sleuth (me), where you can ask a writing-related question. Hope to see you there for some face time. You'll likely see me there asking questions at some point. When it comes to writing, I'm triple-challenged: inspector, engineer, and ex-gubmint bureaucrat! [:-shake] WJ - your theory works for me. I watch the screen while I type and I frequently hit the backspace key to correct my mistakes on the fly.
Brian G Posted July 5, 2007 Report Posted July 5, 2007 Originally posted by Bonnie Trenga Be suspicious of everything. That's how I find errors. You guys must take the same tack when you're checking a house. You don't assume everything is fine with the house, right? Same with writing. Assume it's wrong, and many times you'll be right. Very good advice, and an even better analogy. Brian G. So Who Are These "Goofy Guys" You Mentioned? [:-clown][)][:-jester]
Bonnie Trenga Posted July 5, 2007 Report Posted July 5, 2007 Les always has something silly to say. You, Brian, Tiger Man, always put a smile on my face. I'm looking forward to seeing how you do in the writing class. I predict you'll write some excellent pieces.
Brian G Posted July 6, 2007 Report Posted July 6, 2007 Originally posted by Bonnie Trenga Les always has something silly to say. Les dreams about being me one day. [] I'm looking forward to seeing how you do in the writing class. I'm about halfway through your book. Between what's in there and what you've posted here, it's amazing how perfectly it meshes with the writing philosophies I've learned from the veterans here (and at ASHI). At first I wasn't sure. We've had a lot of various knotheads wander through here, only looking to make a quick buck from us, but at this point I'm convinced you care as much about your profession as we care about ours. Salute! Brian G. They Who Don't Give a Damn Ain't Worth a Damn [:-mischie
Bonnie Trenga Posted July 7, 2007 Report Posted July 7, 2007 Quick bucks might be nice, but good writing is better.[^]
Brandon Whitmore Posted July 19, 2007 Report Posted July 19, 2007 I just wanted you guys to know that an article in WORKING RE MAGAZINE has been written using this topic-- you never know where the information in this forum will end up- www.workingre.com/workingre/rose-by-any ... nline.html
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