Definitely jerks to go around, but at least you just got snapped at.
Will keep that in mind and see how things go this week, anyway.
Will keep that in mind and see how things go this week, anyway.
you live at home, you have no mortgage, no wife and no children. finding a new job and changing your life is literally the easiest thing imaginable. you have total and utter freedom, as well as likely financial independence.Dilbert_X wrote:
Meanwhile I've had no direction for the last twelve months and I'm now struggling to spin out my days.
Sounds like you need to standardize the audit reporting structure. Fun stuff. Do you guys have a dedicated continuous improvement manager?RTHKI wrote:
We do 6s audits(safety/cleanliness/organization) multiple times a month. Some people routinely put 20+ mb worth of pictures in them. The forms in excel... It's stupid long to download
i got put up to the most senior class at my first school two years before i was actually supposed to be in that class. i effectively studied the same 'final year' curriculum 3 times.Dilbert_X wrote:
Aged 11 I guessed the existence of trigonometry, my maths teacher went ballistic - "you can't learn that yet, you'll have to wait"
Last edited by uziq (2021-09-09 02:48:54)
“The prevalence of intellectual disabilities also varies a great deal as a function of age. Across all levels of IQ, the highest prevalence occurs in the 6-to-19 age range—over 97% of those with intellectual disabilities served under IDEA, an estimated 70% of the total population with intellectual disabilities. The pattern of prevalence is similar for those with intellectual disabilities but who have IQs of 50 and above, except that an even higher percentage falls into the 6-19 age range and smaller percentages in the preschool and postschool ranges. Several factors contribute to this pattern. The years of formal schooling are particularly taxing for those with intellectual disabilities because the task require conceptual performance in areas in which they are most deficient. The drop in prevalence after school years is interesting and occurs for reasons related to but somewhat different from incidence influences. After formal education, many individuals with intellectual disabilities are placed back in an environment where the demands focus less on their areas of greatest difficulty. They seem more able to adapt in the postschool environment. In addition to a lower incidence during postschool years, prevalence also is reduced because some individuals may no longer be functioning as disabled and are thus “declassified.” This reduction in prevalence has often been referred to as the phenomenon of “Disappearing” or “6-hour” disability (referring to the time spent in school each day). This may indicate that the school curriculum is out of phase with later life and may not represent effective education, at least for these people.”
Last edited by uziq (2021-09-09 03:52:12)
The same chapter explained that researchers concluded 50% of intellectual disability cases are preventable. Malnutrition, drugs, bad pregnancy, etc. I actually laughed and shook my head when I learned that statistic. It's not haha funny but what a world we would live in if we could have instead made 50% of people with ID into people with a normal IQ range. Can you imagine what we lost in the modern U.S. due to poor funding of prenatal care alone?uziq wrote:
malnutrition, of any sort, during early years can be catastrophic. it's why poor people are in a hopeless spiral. they have kids, don't/can't afford to feed them properly, and the early years hit to IQ is irreparable.
in addition, malnutrition is linked to anti-social disorders and poor impulse control. it literally retards neural development and starves key areas of the brain responsible for emotional and intellectual intelligence.
https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2 … 005027.htm
https://academic.oup.com/nutritionrevie … 67/1859597
interesting conclusion from that paragraph.