Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't seen an English person, let alone a teenager, working in a fast food, busboy or retail position in 10 years. In Montgomery County, those jobs are all Spanish speaking immigrant jobs. So are all landscaping too.
The only jobs I ever see teenagers take are camp counselors, lifeguards, and local shops who still hire legal English speaking people.
Many teens can't find jobs, many don't want to work with people that don't speak English, many have parents who want them volunteering so it looks good on college apps. Gone are the days kids worked minimum wage, learned customer service, took orders and socialized with peers. I think it is a complete disservice to this coddled generation.
You must not frequent Chick-fil-a!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't seen an English person, let alone a teenager, working in a fast food, busboy or retail position in 10 years. In Montgomery County, those jobs are all Spanish speaking immigrant jobs. So are all landscaping too.
The only jobs I ever see teenagers take are camp counselors, lifeguards, and local shops who still hire legal English speaking people.
Many teens can't find jobs, many don't want to work with people that don't speak English, many have parents who want them volunteering so it looks good on college apps. Gone are the days kids worked minimum wage, learned customer service, took orders and socialized with peers. I think it is a complete disservice to this coddled generation.
I haven't ever seen an English person working in fast food, but it would be hilarious. Can you imagine? "Good day, my fine sir! May I offer you a packet of chips to accompany your delectable hamburger? Would you care to supersize that order, my fair lady? Tip top, cheerio, God save the queen and all that rubbish!"
I'm sorry, or did you mean English-speaking?
Anonymous wrote:I think having a kid do a minimum wage job is a total waste. Teach him to develop and market a skill and be self employed. It teaches drive, self-sufficiency, entrepreneurial spirit, business, independence, etc.
Working at McDonalds teaches you how to be a bitch.
Anonymous wrote:I haven't seen an English person, let alone a teenager, working in a fast food, busboy or retail position in 10 years. In Montgomery County, those jobs are all Spanish speaking immigrant jobs. So are all landscaping too.
The only jobs I ever see teenagers take are camp counselors, lifeguards, and local shops who still hire legal English speaking people.
Many teens can't find jobs, many don't want to work with people that don't speak English, many have parents who want them volunteering so it looks good on college apps. Gone are the days kids worked minimum wage, learned customer service, took orders and socialized with peers. I think it is a complete disservice to this coddled generation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it important that he makes money? My youngest is 12 and volunteers every Saturday morning with an animal rescue group. He cleans cages, feeds and waters, walks and play with dogs, and helps the vet techs with minor procedures. He also interacts with the public by answering questions during adoption drives.
It's been a great experience for him.
Is this in the DC area? Something like this would be great for my DD.
Anonymous wrote:When I was in H.S. I was designing webpages for $100 an hour while my friends were working part time at Starbucks. Then they went on to college and worked at Starbucks to get by. And now they have a degree and still work at Starbucks. While I meanwhile have a wonderful job and a great life in DC because I had 10 years of RELEVANT experience and they graduated with food service experience.
I feel bad for you if you think ANY serious job will look at a college graduates resume and see McDonalds for 4 years and think "oh that is nice, they probably are a good worker and reliable and learned good job skills."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What state are you in? I know in Maryland, kids under 16 cannot work past 8pm at night, so many places don't hire them for after school work.
I still know tons of teens who work fast food. They are slightly older, though.
Some others:
Movie theaters
Lifeguard
Parks department - seasonal (probably just summer)
Camp Counselor (summers)
DC Gov't is sponsoring a mentor/internship program for DC teens in HS. They intern on the hill in Congressional and Senate offices. They also have internships in city gov't. I also recommend any IT internship you can find.
that, or have him coem up with a small business plan and execute it . Can be small: like land scaping, dog walking, etc.. as long as they come up with their own idea and take a risk, put in the time to make it work, etc..
Fast food, are you kidding ??
Anonymous wrote:I think having a kid do a minimum wage job is a total waste. Teach him to develop and market a skill and be self employed. It teaches drive, self-sufficiency, entrepreneurial spirit, business, independence, etc.
Working at McDonalds teaches you how to be a bitch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't seen an English person, let alone a teenager, working in a fast food, busboy or retail position in 10 years. In Montgomery County, those jobs are all Spanish speaking immigrant jobs. So are all landscaping too.
The only jobs I ever see teenagers take are camp counselors, lifeguards, and local shops who still hire legal English speaking people.
Many teens can't find jobs, many don't want to work with people that don't speak English, many have parents who want them volunteering so it looks good on college apps. Gone are the days kids worked minimum wage, learned customer service, took orders and socialized with peers. I think it is a complete disservice to this coddled generation.
You must not frequent Chick-fil-a!
Anonymous wrote:Is it important that he makes money? My youngest is 12 and volunteers every Saturday morning with an animal rescue group. He cleans cages, feeds and waters, walks and play with dogs, and helps the vet techs with minor procedures. He also interacts with the public by answering questions during adoption drives.
It's been a great experience for him.
Anonymous wrote:I haven't seen an English person, let alone a teenager, working in a fast food, busboy or retail position in 10 years. In Montgomery County, those jobs are all Spanish speaking immigrant jobs. So are all landscaping too.
The only jobs I ever see teenagers take are camp counselors, lifeguards, and local shops who still hire legal English speaking people.
Many teens can't find jobs, many don't want to work with people that don't speak English, many have parents who want them volunteering so it looks good on college apps. Gone are the days kids worked minimum wage, learned customer service, took orders and socialized with peers. I think it is a complete disservice to this coddled generation.