As you may know, at the end of the school year Judy
Rychlewski is retiring. William Jewell has been involved in interviewing
individuals who might take Judy’s position as a friend and advisor to students
and alumni. It is with great excitement that we are announcing Jewell has hired
Marissa Bland to take over leadership in the Career Development and Internship
Department. Marissa is coming to us from The University of Missouri Kansas City
where she was coordinator for the Office of Multicultural Student Affairs. The
current staff had a chance to sit down with Marissa right before she was offered
the position to interview her and evaluate how well we thought she would fit
into the Jewell community. Marissa has an extremely welcoming and inviting
personality that makes it easy to get to know her. In addition to being friendly
Marissa has great enthusiasm for students and helping them reach their career
goals. We look forward to Marissa joining the William Jewell family May 28!
Thursday, May 9, 2013
Friday, May 3, 2013
Myers Briggs
Recently I took the Myers Briggs test along
with fellow coworker, Ben Boggs. We took it on a whim because Judy had given it
to a business class here at Jewell, and we were interested in how each of us
would be classified. Ben had taken this test several times and was once again
placed as an ENFJ group (Extroverted, Intuitive, Feeling, and Judging).This
group is characterized by their desire to help others and want to bring out the
best in people. They are understanding, encouraging, and driven. They are
suggested to get involved in jobs that work to help others such as: counselor, clergy
member, teacher, politicians, and human resource management. My placement was
in the ISTJ group (Introverted, Sensing, Thinking, and Judging). My group is characterized
by an extreme sense of dedication and loyalty. We place high value on
established systems and rules, and at times can come off distant from others as
a result. It told me I should be involved in fields such as: police, law,
medicine, and the military. After taking our tests and looking at the results
Ben and I talked about our various outcomes. We both thought the descriptions
of character traits were startlingly close to the characteristics we actually
displayed. However, neither of us felt that our jobs were things we would excel
at, but could see why the test would place the other person in the category it
did. Overall both Ben and I found the results to be interesting, and especially
found the section that listed weaknesses we might have extremely educational. I
would suggest taking this test if you are interested in character traits you
possess that might influence your job choice.
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