Using A Degree In Hospitality To Open Your Own Business

August 20th, 2011 by admin No comments »

What do you enjoy the most? If it isn’t your job, you need a new one. Although you may be worried about the rough and unstable economy, that may be the exact reason you should move forward with schooling. Obtaining a valuable and marketable skill set that will allow you to advance and move into the career field you have always thought about.

Which career field are you in? If it is a broad field, the contacts that you may have made may help you advance or move into a different sector. Obtaining a college degree is one of the best and most trusted ways to move forward in your career. If you would like to transition into a new career field that is completely different than what you have experienced before, training and education will be the best way to break into something new.

Although I did not love school when I was a teenager, I finished high school with the rest of my peers. I thought that I would be able to make a living working in the restaurant that I waited tables in for a while before deciding what I truly wanted to do with my life. Soon, the bills piled up and my need for a higher salary grew. There was a few years that I tried to make it on my own without any training or education before I enrolled in a community college program for my Associate’s degree.

When I enrolled in courses, I decided to take night classes and spend my days working in a local day spa. I was in charge of booking appointments, ensuring guest satisfaction, and updating the website. I loved the hospitality industry and how great it was to give others a special experience. I decided to enroll in more hospitality focused courses in order to further my chances of breaking into the industry.

After graduating, I received my Bachelor’s degree in hospitality management. At the time, I worked in a large city with several theme parks that were centered around tourism. I found a job at a five-star resort and within months I was promoted to management level.

After a few years, I decided that managing a resort or restaurant would be a great career, but I wanted something more. I wanted to manage my own resort or restaurant and make my own rules. I enrolled in business courses for a Master’s degree online to ensure that I would be able to manage the business and accounting side of things as well. » Read more: Using A Degree In Hospitality To Open Your Own Business

Library Noise Now The Golden Standard – New Values Corrupt Silence

August 10th, 2011 by admin No comments »

Sounding Off About Sound

I have spent over twenty years using libraries–as a traditional student, as an independent-study student, and as an individual who constantly pursues knowledge for life-long enrichment. During this period of years, I have witnessed libraries mutate from generally quiet environments to generally noisy environments. Modern-day librarians seem to accept noise as the new standard. I claim that noise is the new threat.

The Reality

I am shocked to observe what appears to be a massive shift in professional attitudes-away from viewing library users as students, to viewing library users as pampered consumers. Much of the noise in today’s libraries, in fact, occurs because of consumer-driven technology such as mobile telephones. Virtually everyone in the developed world possesses the freedom and the finances to buy a mobile telephone. Virtually everyone in the developed world, therefore, seems to think that they have the freedom to use a mobile phone anywhere and anytime they please.

Many mobile phone users have cultivated an exaggerated sense of self entitlement. Furthermore, they have used this exaggerated sense of self entitlement to pressure library leaders into compromising libraries’ traditionally quiet atmospheres. Now that talking on cell phones has gained a hold, talking, in general, has gained a new permissive atmosphere, because subtle boundaries between appropriate talking and inappropriate talking have become confused. Consequently, defining and enforcing standards for talking have become impossible. Any suggestion of not talking can encounter accusations of violating civil rights, which I view as ludicrous.

Library leaders want their institutions and their jobs to survive, so they relax what consumers perceive as rigid standards, in order to keep bodies and dollars coming in. The threat of losing patrons who support professional salaries is apparently too great to ignore.

Consumers want stimulation, satisfaction and entertainment, all within their comfort zones. Librarians, thus, have redefined libraries primarily to meet these lowest-common-denominator needs. The pressure of consumerism, thus, seems to be winning out over the ideal of quiet study.

Teachers No More

Worst of all, the concept of “teacher” seems to be crumbling, also under the pressure of consumerism. There seem to be few true teachers today and very few dedicated students, especially in the age range of adults. Instead, there are primarily consumers of products or services on one hand and primarily salespeople of products and services on the other. In this manic consumer atmosphere, the prime directive is, “The customer is always right” or ”Trust the user.”

If the customer is always right, then there is little meaning to teaching the customer (student) anything better than he or she already knows. Teaching, after all, requires conveying something unfamiliar to a student, who has to endure a growth phase of awkwardness and slight conceptual discomfort. In other words, learning requires discipline, and “discipline” has become a bad word.

Superficial Appearances Belie Deep Flaws

On the surface, a library can look good. It can appear to offer inviting spaces and enriching atmospheres. A library’s mission statement can use all the right words too. On closer examination, though, these spaces and atmospheres can work insidiously against quiet users. If leaders qualify noise as a permissible aspect of acquiring information, then noise makers will operate with little regard for quiet users. Again, I have seen this happen first hand. Even as I write this article, there is a chorus of noises around me-loud talking adults in an adjacent hallway, crying children, even staff people whose duties require talking. » Read more: Library Noise Now The Golden Standard – New Values Corrupt Silence