Yeah, and the sad thing is for me, they want to close my case by September. I went to school for medical transcription, but there's no work in it in the local area, and there wasn't before the recession either. It's going to be hard to get something with that education as it doesn't help much for other types of work.
----- Original Message -----From: Johnston, RickSent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 3:53 PMSubject: RE: [jfw-employment] how can i better define my job searches when using online job search tools?David,have you attempted working with a recruter or someone who can assist you directly.Web sights are mixed up with all sorts of features not intended for us the visually challenged! :)Many times you can use a drop down menu to scan through the job listings that are available, but this is not consistent.I also understand that in our current economic climate, many companies have frozen their hiring processes.i would suggest you check with a Braille institute or state rehab in your area and get some of the assistance our country still offers us! :)Good luck, it's really difficult out there right now!Thank you kindly, Rick!-----Original Message-----
From: jfw-employment@yahoogroups.com [mailto:jfw-employment@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of david ingram
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 1:35 PM
To: jfw-employment@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [jfw-employment] how can i better define my job searches when using online job search tools?
Hi list members, i'd like to know how can i better define my job searches when i'm using on line sites when looking for jobs? I ask this question because when i do a search on the career-network site, that some times no matter how i word different searches, i come away with the same results. As an example, if i use the words entry level before typing the words data entry or data processing or data processor, i seem to get the same results, but i don't know why this is? I would appreciate any information that you might have. Thank you.