What’s a Year of Experience?
December 28th, 2004
We’re teaching my older daughter to drive. She’s had her permit since late August, and we try to make sure she drives 2-4 hours/week. In reality, that’s not a lot of driving. Just commuting to work most likely takes you 5 hours/week. But this past weekend, my daughter drove back from our ski weekend in Vermont to Boston, in the nor’easter.
Here in New England, nor’easters are a fact of life. In the winter, they dump a bunch a snow, or frozen slush which turns to ice. In the fall and spring, they dump a lot of rain, which sometimes turns to ice. Because some form of precipitation is a common part of driving, New Englanders who learn from their driving experiences tend to be fairly good at driving in snow, ice, and rain. It’s not fun, but it’s doable.
There are people who never learn from their driving experience in snow or ice. Every year, they’re surprised by the snow or the ice, and they drive too fast (or too slow). These people may have plenty of years of driving experience, but it’s the same year repeated over and over again.
Some parents want to protect their kids from driving in treacherous conditions. I have to admit, that was me on Sunday. But Mark said, “Do you want her to learn how to drive in the snow and the ice with one of us in the front seat or by herself?” Ok, Mark is clearly the thinking one here
You’ve probably met people who claim 5, 10, 17 years of experience doing something, and you’d like to make sure they really do have that experience, not one year of experience several times. If you’re not sure how to detect someone with the same year of experience several times, here are some questions you can adapt for your needs:
- “Tell me about the first time you did that kind of work…”
- “What was similar and different about this last time (use the candidate’s resume for example projects)? …”
- “Tell me a about a new skill you learned.” … “What steps did you take to learn it?” … “How did you know you’d mastered that skill?”
- “How can you tell you’ve learned this skill/technique/practice?”
People who know the difference between the same year of experience multiple times and multiple years of experience have answers to these questions. People who do the same thing year-in, year-out don’t have good answers.
We’re trying to help our daughter gain that full year of experience that the graduated driver’s license requires, without putting her or other people at risk. She’ll have a year of experience driving. She still might not like driving in ice and snow, but she’ll be able to do so. How about you? Can you see differences in your work now and last year? If not, make sure you’re not acquiring the same year of experience all over again. And when you interview people, ask questions to see how a candidate has learned and grown in their work over time.
Entry Filed under: experience, interview question
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2 Comments Add your own
1. Mike Kelly | December 29th, 2004 at 2:46 pm
Johanna, how would someone with many years of experience (which I am not) effectively communicate the distinction you make on a resume?
2. Ronja Addams-Moring | March 10th, 2005 at 11:16 pm
I can relate to how difficult it is to understand that people who live in areas with snow and ice can get SURPRISED by the weather. Here in Finland (northermost corner of the European Union) we have 3-5 months of icy driving weather per year, and people STILL get surprised by it! I don’t get it. How does one’s mind work if repetitive observations and experiences are a surprise??
When I had to choose, after estimating my long-term survival likelihood, I chose to learn to drive during the winter. It was not an easy or pleasant experience, yet I will recommend it to my kids when they grow old enough. And I will be gnawing my nails off every time one of them is taking a driving lesson, I’m sure…
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