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#65319 - 08/12/05 12:43 AM
Re: Cashiering
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Member
Registered: 05/14/05
Posts: 243
Loc: Long Island, New York
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I heard how Home Depot treats their employees! I am a converted Lowes shopper! Even if it is out of my way!!!
HD screwed my order up & the man in charge told me it wouldn't have happened if I didn't change my order in the first place!!! They charged $100 to come measure my kitchen & got it wrong!!!!!!!!
To top it all off....we got the original order!!! And then 2 weeks later the re-order!!! I wanted to go down there & strangle someone!!!!
It was a bad experience all around!!! For someone spending thousands of dollars--they treated us like dirt!!!
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#65320 - 12/08/05 08:11 PM
Re: Cashiering
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Member
Registered: 11/15/05
Posts: 2798
Loc: NM, transplant from NJ
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Oh yes, "ringing them up". That was when cashiers had to know how to count back the change. Oh and I'm a Jersey Girl, too! Was born/raised there.
I miss it back then. [ December 08, 2005, 05:12 PM: Message edited by: Di ]
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#65321 - 12/09/05 06:08 PM
Re: Cashiering
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Member
Registered: 09/22/05
Posts: 868
Loc: Merrimack, NH
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We used to try to teach the kids in elementary school to count up to make change. None of them understood why they had to. They had never seen a store without scanners. I used to ask them what they would do if the computer went down, which I've seen happen. The young cashiers panic.
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#65322 - 12/10/05 05:23 PM
Re: Cashiering
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Member
Registered: 11/23/05
Posts: 71
Loc: Midwest
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My first job was cashiering in a grocery store. I always counted my change back, because my mom (a former retail clerk) told me to if I didn't want to be in debt to the store. My register balanced and balanced and balanced, even when I worked express. The other clerks just took it for granted that they'd have to pay back shortages every night. Duh???
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#65324 - 12/10/05 09:50 PM
Re: Cashiering
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Member
Registered: 08/08/05
Posts: 816
Loc: Fredericksburg, Va.
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Mall shopping the day after Thanksgiving, I was in Bath and Body Works. Waited in the long line, the girl rings me up, & totals the amount. When I gave her the money she immediately keyed in the amount, counted the change to herself and put the money in my hand. Something told me to count what she had given me back. She had actually gave me back $20. to much. Asked her if she would like some back...she asked for the sales receipt so she could check for how much she needed...
Do they teach how to count back money, anymore?
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#65325 - 12/11/05 02:05 AM
Re: Cashiering
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Member
Registered: 09/22/05
Posts: 868
Loc: Merrimack, NH
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Yes, they do. But obviously they don't do it very well. Part of the problem, as I said in an earlier post, is the kids' attitude of "Why bother to learn to do this when the machines do it for us?"
It always amazed me how the kids in elementary school would get real unhappy when we didn't let them use calculators. Also the number of first graders who couldn't read a standard clock cause all they'd ever seen was digital. What's wrong with this picture?
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#65327 - 12/11/05 05:01 PM
Re: Cashiering
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Member
Registered: 09/22/05
Posts: 868
Loc: Merrimack, NH
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Believe it or not, handwriting is still a requirement that is taught every day in the elementary schools in our district. The kids use manuscript printing at first, then switch over to cursive in third grade.
My kids were taught this way, and both of them print almost exclusively now. Their cursive writing is awful! I've been told that's common for people who learned to print first.
I find when I spent a lot of time composing things at the computer, my handwriting deteriorates.
I think it will be a long time before computers make handwriting unnecessary. Most legal documents still require some sort of signature.
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