experience –
How long to stay at a job you don't like?Rating: (votes: 0) yes. plus, thank god you do not have to show up to work there often. if you have to work more then one day a week and the position is dangerous, then quitting now (while on probation) is a good time. you do not have to wait 6 months. Comment:
Why wait?
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Quote from mbarnbsnyes. plus, thank god you do not have to show up to work there often. if you have to work more then one day a week and the position is dangerous, then quitting now (while on probation) is a good time. you do not have to wait 6 months.
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Quote from classicdameWhy wait?
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Quote from paerrn20i'm waiting because this position is a supervisor position and i would like to have that on my resume, so i think 6 months is the minimum i should stick it out.
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Quote from PAERRN20I'm waiting because this position is a supervisor position and I would like to have that on my resume, so I think 6 months is the minimum I should stick it out.
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6 months is reasonable. I have hated my new job since day one but I feel I do owe them for training but as soon as 6 mo mark is here, Ill write that letter with a smile.
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90 days to one year
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I would say that the length of stay is TOTALLY predicated on whether or not you feel you are effective at your job. The day that question answers "no"; put in your 2 weeks notice. At that point, you are doing yourself and no one else ANY service at all.Your short-timers syndrome kicks in once you think "this is no longer for me"; and you will make enemies, hand out flawed evaluations and look at EVERYTHING in a skewed perspective.Just go. Your mind-set will be apparent in ways that you could not have imagined; and could come back to haunt you.
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I think you should just go also. That place sounds like trouble. It is always better to quit while you are ahead.
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Hello. Good luck on your decision on if or when you will resign from your current PRN job. "Old School" of thought about how long to stay at a professional job one does not like was to stay one year (in order to establish a good job reference.). There was only one time when I did not stick with a job for at least a year. The exception was when I resigned from a nursing job after working only two months because the employer had not told me the truth about my expected weekly work hours. My understanding in my interview was that I had agreed to work in a part-time, patient education, salaried position with a requirement to work 24 hours per week. During my first week of employment, my supervisor stated that "...as a part-time, salaried employee I was expected to work 40 hours per week because she was a full time salaried employee and she worked 60 hours every week...". Best wishes to you.
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Quote from PAERRN20I recently started working a per diem/casual/prn job in a different hospital and I do not like it at all. There is constant staff turnover. Since I have worked there, there has been 6 different staff nurse positions and countless ancillary positions open for the unit. I'm thinking I should stick it out to the 6 month mark then turn in my resignation. Does this sound reasonable?
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