by Guest_Aug2013 » Tue Oct 08, 2013 9:10 pm
recipient99 wrote:CMMMM wrote:I'm with you, but I'm not optimistic that the program is that reasonable. ... the DoD pays everyone to show up and surf the internets. Depressing, really...Accepting the SMART scholarship was mos def the worst move of my career.
Guest wrote:SMART couldn't give two craps about what you do.
guest4 wrote:I would love to get released. Anyone else with me?
I agree. These posts are gems that really encompass well the spirit of the SMART Program.
It saddens me to look over at the "General Questions and the Application" forum and see all the young talent getting enthusiastic about jumping on board.
I would like to add words of encouragement to all the yound talent by providing my personal experience as I am encouraging my son who accepted SMART scholarship. I am an immigrant and have good 25 years+ DoD electronics engineer career. I spoke very little English when I jointed DoD civilian workforce, but I was very good with numbers. In my early years, I did not have good jobs nor bosses, but many mature co-worker helped to understand that I can make thing better. I also had job that not required more than couple hours of work. I learned to speak up in non-complaining manner and took initiative to find work or propose value added work or move on. I worked as hardware designer, software developer, researcher, database modeling, technical contracting officer, system engineer, program manager, Information assurance architect, etc. I also realized that it was not about instant job satisfaction when work provided some small or large contribution to protect our soldier in harm way and keep our nation safe, and it is very good reason for me to go to work everyday. I was hope to retire as GS-13, and I am a GS-15 engineer.
Do what best for you, but please don't let one or two lousy jobs discourage you. You can take it as an opportunity to learn and improve system, process, project or organization or learn transferable skills such as communication, program planning, etc. DoD (government) needs smart people to acquire the needed state of the art capabilities to protect the nation and transfer them into commercial usage. It is fun to develop and test a particular technology, but it also fun to learn about many technologies, researches and concepts then to mature and apply them to create a full system or capability. With DoD funding, industry capability and academic knowledge, smart people like you can do so much for the nation safety, economy and health.
[quote="recipient99"][quote="CMMMM"]I'm with you, but I'm not optimistic that the program is that reasonable. ... the DoD pays everyone to show up and surf the internets. Depressing, really...Accepting the SMART scholarship was mos def the worst move of my career.[/quote]
[quote="Guest"]SMART couldn't give two craps about what you do.[/quote]
[quote="guest4"]I would love to get released. Anyone else with me?[/quote]
I agree. These posts are gems that really encompass well the spirit of the SMART Program.
It saddens me to look over at the "General Questions and the Application" forum and see all the young talent getting enthusiastic about jumping on board.[/quote]
I would like to add words of encouragement to all the yound talent by providing my personal experience as I am encouraging my son who accepted SMART scholarship. I am an immigrant and have good 25 years+ DoD electronics engineer career. I spoke very little English when I jointed DoD civilian workforce, but I was very good with numbers. In my early years, I did not have good jobs nor bosses, but many mature co-worker helped to understand that I can make thing better. I also had job that not required more than couple hours of work. I learned to speak up in non-complaining manner and took initiative to find work or propose value added work or move on. I worked as hardware designer, software developer, researcher, database modeling, technical contracting officer, system engineer, program manager, Information assurance architect, etc. I also realized that it was not about instant job satisfaction when work provided some small or large contribution to protect our soldier in harm way and keep our nation safe, and it is very good reason for me to go to work everyday. I was hope to retire as GS-13, and I am a GS-15 engineer.
Do what best for you, but please don't let one or two lousy jobs discourage you. You can take it as an opportunity to learn and improve system, process, project or organization or learn transferable skills such as communication, program planning, etc. DoD (government) needs smart people to acquire the needed state of the art capabilities to protect the nation and transfer them into commercial usage. It is fun to develop and test a particular technology, but it also fun to learn about many technologies, researches and concepts then to mature and apply them to create a full system or capability. With DoD funding, industry capability and academic knowledge, smart people like you can do so much for the nation safety, economy and health.