i heard that 90% of statistics were made up?wikiwiki said:is it true that frogs are more surreal than crunchy buildings?
no statistics are ever true. 90% of statisticians agree.
That's actually wrong, it's 73.6% of statistics are made up, 87.3% of statisticians argree while the other 24.2% display different opinions.AtticusFinch said:i heard that 90% of statistics were made up?
well thats the general rumour.noneother said:Is it true that you only use 10% of what you learn at university in the work force?
No offence but I highly doubt you were at a position in the company where the usage of OB theory would have been much use. The theory is quite good in giving you a ground step to build your own methodology on top of and if you do an MBA or go for any kind of management training at any organisation the same theory will come up again because it works in most casesyourdad said:wow i would be surprised if any uni was used in the real world. I did "Organisational Behaviour" (managment unit) for an elective, then got a job in the holidays and realised how little use it would be if you were actually in charge of employees, and that was meant to be a 'real life' kinda unit.
Myself also.Lexicographer said:I'll probably have to use every single thing I learn at some point in my career.
What a pointless thread, hunny bunny. Whose truth? What do you learn? What degree? Which Uni? Which work force?noneother said:Is it true that you only use 10% of what you learn at university in the work force?
noneother said:Is it true that you only use 10% of what you learn at university in the work force?
what a pointless replyPwarYuex said:What a pointless thread, hunny bunny. Whose truth? What do you learn? What degree? Which Uni? Which work force?
How was it pointless? This thread is just silly. How can anyone objectively quantify what you learn, and then what you use? Even then, wouldn't everything you learn and use have to also be qualified? Then who's going to do that, how would it be done?noneother said:what a pointless reply