01-27-2004, 08:02 PM
I think that would be z/500. The formula is currently 1 year =20% so:
1/5 = 20%
2/5 = 40%
3/5 = 60%
4/5 = 80%
5/5 = 100%
Actually, the company is pretty encouraging of continuing education. They have a pretty generous tuition reimbursement program, and they're generally willing to send you to any professional meeting to take methods courses or anything else. For me this is good since it's my first job out of college, and they expect the folks on that level to only be here for a few years before going back to grad school, so there's no huge need to hide your plans from supervisors or management. The only thing that they are sticklers about is turning in your timesheet on Monday.
1/5 = 20%
2/5 = 40%
3/5 = 60%
4/5 = 80%
5/5 = 100%
Actually, the company is pretty encouraging of continuing education. They have a pretty generous tuition reimbursement program, and they're generally willing to send you to any professional meeting to take methods courses or anything else. For me this is good since it's my first job out of college, and they expect the folks on that level to only be here for a few years before going back to grad school, so there's no huge need to hide your plans from supervisors or management. The only thing that they are sticklers about is turning in your timesheet on Monday.
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