As far as I can tell, this "dumbing down" is not a recent phenomenon. Back in the mid-sixties I managed a Quick Mart store in Kannapolis, N.C. Quite often I had young people come in and ask for an empolyment application...
I kept an extra register drawer under the counter with sufficient change in it for my "test." I'd place the drawer on the counter, then tell them that they were now a cashier. I then would lay a candy bar on the counter and tell them that the candy was 25 cents, so with tax added the total was 28 cents. I'd then hand them a dollar bill and ask them to count back my change...
Easily nine out of ten would fail at this trivial task, at which point I would tell them that while I would give them an application if they still wanted it, it would just waste their time and effort, as there was no way they'd be hired.
When they asked why I'd simply tell them that if they can't even count change properly, they were placing themselves at risk of being cheated out of their hard-earned money for the rest of their lives. How were they to know if they were getting back correct change from any cashier?
Once in a great while, one of them would be interested enough to ask me how to correctly count change. Most of them wound up being hired and trained...
Of course these days the electronic registers do the math and tell them what the change is, but the ignorance is still present. For example, hand them another 2 pennies after they've already entered in what you initially gave them and most of the time you'll get a blank look... :isadizzy:
I kept an extra register drawer under the counter with sufficient change in it for my "test." I'd place the drawer on the counter, then tell them that they were now a cashier. I then would lay a candy bar on the counter and tell them that the candy was 25 cents, so with tax added the total was 28 cents. I'd then hand them a dollar bill and ask them to count back my change...
Easily nine out of ten would fail at this trivial task, at which point I would tell them that while I would give them an application if they still wanted it, it would just waste their time and effort, as there was no way they'd be hired.
When they asked why I'd simply tell them that if they can't even count change properly, they were placing themselves at risk of being cheated out of their hard-earned money for the rest of their lives. How were they to know if they were getting back correct change from any cashier?
Once in a great while, one of them would be interested enough to ask me how to correctly count change. Most of them wound up being hired and trained...
Of course these days the electronic registers do the math and tell them what the change is, but the ignorance is still present. For example, hand them another 2 pennies after they've already entered in what you initially gave them and most of the time you'll get a blank look... :isadizzy: