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Thread: Job Interviews - your craziest question?

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    Job Interviews - your craziest question?

    I have an older retired friend who wanted a p-t job for extra money. She applied to be a cashier at a school close to her home. After a background check and online application, she was called in for a formal interview. The questions were very high level for a cashier position and went on and on. Finally they asked "what is your weakness?" She looked at both interviewers and said, "My weakness is potato chips!"

    They appreciated her sense of humor and she got the job, but is interviewing really this crazy everywhere?

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    Senior Member iris lilies's Avatar
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    I dont remember any weid qustions but
    I had weird interview experiences.

    For my first professional job, one interview took place at my house. Oh yeah, that was weird. I was living with my parents, and my mother got all twitterpated about the cleanlness of her house. It looked fine, but we had to clean it anyway.

    I draped my best cat on the back of the sofa, thinking he would add so much to the atmosphete. The interviewer completely ignored him. Not a cat person, I guess.

    For my third professional job I interviewed in Corvalis, OR among other places. That public library was technologically behind my current workplace, and I was looking for improved technology in my job. It was also across the country from where I worked, but it was my goal to move to Oregon. Anyway, they had all 6 candidates there the same day and we rotated through various interview sections, each candidate getting 20 minutes or so with an interviewing team. Then, after 20 minutes, candidates would move on to the next interview module. All candidates and library administrators met up for lunch, sitting around one big table so we could see our competition! Then onto the afternoon's interview sessins. In one section we had to role play. Oh dear god, internally I was rolling my eyes by noon. I lok back at that and see it as one big intimidation exercise although
    I'm sure it was meant as an exercise in efficiency. The library director went on to much bigger things to be nationally known thru her leadership at Seattle Public Library.

    I did not get that job and frankly, the only thing it had going for it was that it was in Oregon and in Corvalis which was then a nice, laid back college town. In the end, that is good because I ended up in St Louis where I've been forever.

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    Senior Member JaneV2.0's Avatar
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    I have a friend who lives in Corvallis, and visits that library most days. It has clearly caught up with the times--its former head librarian was hired away by Seattle, IIRC. And Corvallis has developed into quite a nice little town.

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    Senior Member iris lilies's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by JaneV2.0 View Post
    I have a friend who lives in Corvallis, and visits that library most days. It has clearly caught up with the times--its former head librarian was hired away by Seattle, IIRC. And Corvallis has developed into quite a nice little town.
    Oh, Im not saying Corvalis public library was super behind the times, it just was not leading edge, and
    I remember that their cataloging department engaged in a practice that would come back to bite them, they just didnt understsnd the technology, or didnt care. And that worried me.

    Midwestern libraries have always been better funded than elsewhere.until recent times, that is. Illinois used to have high end technology and great connectvity for all of their libraries, but thst has fallen to sh*t.

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    Senior Member JaneV2.0's Avatar
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    I think both the King and Multnomah County libraries are usually rated at the top of library systems; I wouldn't want to live in a library backwater, that's for sure!
    Sorry about your role-playing--I'm glad I left employment about the time such foolishness started wholesale here.

    I had a job at Amazon in about 1998, if I wanted it. I had only to take a typing test, which I would have passed easily. But I couldn't make the hours/parking/bus situation work. I thought it was amazing how much information they wanted for a ten dollar an hour job--resume, college transcripts, e-mail customer service test--answering sample questions from "customers," and a phone interview. By the time I was taking technical writing courses a year or so later, many in my classes were from Amazon, having been laid off, So I guess I'm glad I couldn't take the job.

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    I don't know if they still ask them, but there used to be a stock series of answers to questions they asked in interviews for your security clearance:

    Are you in the employ of a foreign power for purposes of espionage?
    - Nyet.

    Are you a homosexual? (Pre-Don't Ask)
    - No, but if the job required it I'd be willing to learn.

    Have you ever advocated the violent overthrow of the government?
    - That would depend on which government.

    Do any of your family members reside in a country hostile to the United States?
    - I have a cousin in San Francisco.

    Do you have any religious or philosophical objections to war?
    - Not if my side has superior firepower.

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    Senior Member catherine's Avatar
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    haha LDAHL! I'll have to keep those responses in mind if I ever get called in for a job interview or jury selection (Based on my one jury experience, I'd welcome the chance to be dismissed if I ever get asked again.)

    I actually thought this was going to be about dumb questions interviewees asked, because having been an interviewer I've heard a few dumb questions. It might be a generational thing, but I was astonished when an interviewee asked me if shopping malls were nearby, because she liked to shop at lunchtime. And if I were looking for a job, I would NEVER ask if I'd be expected to work past 5pm, but people do. I'm of the generation that would do everything I could to appear to my prospective employer to be a rabid workaholic. If asked if I'd be willing to babysit her kids or paint her house, my answer would be an unequivocal "of course! And can I offer you a massage?"

    I don't think the question "What is your weakness" is a dumb question at all. A hard one to answer, because you have to frame it in a way that won't make you look like a bad hire. You can make any strength LOOK like a weakness, so those are the things you use. "I tend to put too much of myself into my work." Or "I used to find it hard to let go and delegate, but I have learned that by trusting my employees, I can be much more productive."
    "Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it--every, every minute?" Emily Webb, Our Town
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    Senior Member Selah's Avatar
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    In Israel, I went on many job interviews where they asked all sorts of intrusive questions that are completely illegal in America, such as my age, marital status, why I came to Israel, how many kids I had, why didn't I have children, how old my husband was, how my (and his health) was, etc. Mind-boggling. Many of these questions are technically illegal in Israel, but everyone ignores the law and asks anyway.

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    Senior Member Gardenarian's Avatar
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    Not unusual in a library setting, but probably not asked in most jobs:

    If you had a childrens library with only three books, what would they be?
    (An encyclopedia, as book of fairytales, and a book about dinosaurs.)

    What was the last book you read?

    How do you handle sleeping patrons?
    (Accidently drop some books near them.)

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    I get the premise of the "what is your weakness" type question, but for a school cashier? Over the top. I'm guessing it was on a standard interview list issued by the school HR group because I know companies love standardization even beyond all common sense.

    Selah - how intrusive! I know in the U.S. it wasn't that long ago that interviewers asked questions like that. A friend said that about 10 years ago her job interviewer asked her age, and when she declined to state it, he abruptly terminated the interview. The interviewer was an attorney who clearly knew that was illegal, but also clearly knew that applicants were very unlikely to turn around and file a complaint against him. I'm sure he was a jerk in many other ways so she dodged a bullet by not getting that job anyway.

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