![]() | User: scully Member Since: 21-Jul-2009 Surveys Created: 0 Last On: 21-Jul-2009 Page Hits: 1 today (4 in the last 30 days) |
Recent Comments:
| Jump to Survey | Only if the student is a member of the teacher's or lecturer's class. |
| Jump to Survey | If this is a coded choice in the computer- then the employee should not have used it. Further the employee might (depending upon circumstance) ask what that choice in the computer is about, and when it should be used? The answer might determine whether to look for another job. Quitting and making a scene will not change the situation except to leave the employee without income to feed self and family. IF it must be the way the ticket is printed, AND the management wants it that way, another action might be to ask if the customer wants to take it outside to a third party (newspaper) otherwise black it out. Eventually someone will do something, either from inside the company or outside. Or the employee will find another job. |
| Jump to Survey | In order to be random it must be without a known cause - that is a result of chance.
So nobody can be held accountable (synonym: responsible) for an event without cause. A traditional term is "Act of God". It seems though that the same people who attribute the event to God set no blame, in fact they turn and thank God for those who are spared- lessons learned- whatever. Insurance is purchased to "pool" risk to recover from an such an event. It is not a matter of blame. Now if you are talking about preparations for possible events- like the levees in New Orleans, or failure of an Insurance company to sufficiently spread its risk, or for a local government to fail to sufficiently plan evacuation, or individuals and families to fail to evacuate---- those are all specific actions that have assignable responsiblity (accountability). That is far different than the event itself. |
