My Job Center Story

This whole experience just made me want to flip tables, so I'll share it with you.
 
So as you know from my previous post, I finished my bachelor last May, but since I had been writing like a crazy person on those pages I hadn't managed to find a job yet. That meant I had to go back to the Job Center, which I hadn't visited since I graduated three years ago and back then only attended one meeting before I got accepted to my bachelor. It had also been a basic meeting like, what are your experiences (and I was like, eh, 1 summer job at a miniature golf court and like, voluenteering at events...does that count?) and then a meeting on how to search for employment.
 
This time, I had a bachelor degree, education all in english, I had engaged in several projects and merit-based activites, I had more basic work experience, had been abroad on exchange twice, had gotten more confident, had taken CV courses and the equilvalent: briefly said, I knew I only went there to a) see if they had any nice jobs in case I wouldn't get accepted to my master and b) have a financial insurence if I couldn't get a job. More or less.
 
So I arrive and wait in line on a monday for about two hours, and when I reach the counter it goes like this:
-Hi, I'd like to re-activate my status an unemployed (still hurts to think about.).
- Sure! When was the last time you were registered?
- Three years ago.
- Three years? Then you're out of the system.
- Okey?
- Go back home and fill in the online application with all your merits and similar, and come back tomorrow.
 
And of course I do that, which basically is copy-pasting my CV onto their webpage, with everything I mentioned above, and it takes no more than 30 minutes. And the next day I'm back again, waiting for two hours, and then being called. I meet a female worker a few years older than me, and she seems nice, especially compared to the oddball of a lady I had to deal with three years ago... The talk starts with me spending 25 minutes re-telling her my entire CV, which I had uploaded to their webpage, on their demand, yesterday. It was very, very obvious that she hadn't read any of it. This was more or less the conversation:
- So what have you done before signing up?
- I finished my bachelor in business administration.
- Oh what does that mean?
- Well, as I wrote on the webpage, it's generally a mixture of economics, project leading, management, HR, some statistics..a well-grounded thing. All in english, the program is called International Management.
- Oh, so you speak english then?
- ...Well, yes, since I passed the degree, and I also spent that exchange semester in England as I wrote on the-
- So, would you say that english isn't a problem?
At this point I think she's got to be pulling my leg, but no. Apparently spending 5 months in England and having a three year all-english university degree doesn't prove that I can speak english. Sigh. So this continues in a similar manner, and this is the conclusion she reaches:

- I can match you as a janitor assistant or cashier. 
 
Excuse me? I did a degree in economics and business, and you can only match me with JANITOR ASSISTANT due to a summer job I did four years ago? Which planet are you on honey? She also sends me to a meeting - which will be proven to be EXACTLY THE SAME DARN MEETING I HAD THREE YEARS AGO. And this, my friends, is when I lost all faith in the offical Swedish Job Center. Three weeks later I got my acceptance to the master program. Please excuse me while I fix my carrier on my own.

My Past 10 Months

 
 
 
So let's not pick up where we left off. Since it's simply too much that has happened since my last update to make any justice of it in a text. Briefly, I finished LIUC without failing any courses, managed to see my beloved Rome again before leaving, got back home and finished my bachelor thesis with a satisfying grade, worked at my old dear moose-museum, visited my girls in the Netherlands, got accepted to my first choice Master program "IT management and Innovation", had my greatest kick-off so far and just started my new lectures. So far, so good.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

etzuko

Småstadstjejen som flyttade ut i den stora världen

RSS 2.0