How to answerself appraisal questions of childcare?
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to answercarehave a performance review at work next week and need help answering a questions in a section relating to career aspirations.
As a bit of a background, I work for a very small NFP in a professional role with no latitude for promotion and if I want a promotion I would have to leave. Mid last year, they adopted a new formal performance review process which entails having quarterly performance reviews.
At the last review, my boss advised the career aspirations section was optional. However they have now done a backflip and all questions must be answered. Very thoroughly. No exceptions.
Anyway, the questions are along the lines of where do you want to be in 1-2 years, 3-5 years, 5-10 years, and how can the organisation support to you to best achieve your goals.
I am stumped about what to write. Reality is that I have been looking for jobs elsewhere and applied for a couple (unsuccessfully) last year. If I was brutally honest in answering the questions on the review, I would say I wanted to leave and want to have a job at x level in a large state gov dept in 1-2 years, y level in 3-5 years and z level in 5-10 years and the organisation could help me by sending me on a few courses that I can add to my resume.
I'm not going to write that down, but am stumped as to what would constitute an acceptable answer.
As a bit of a background, I work for a very small NFP in a professional role with no latitude for promotion and if I want a promotion I would have to leave. Mid last year, they adopted a new formal performance review process which entails having quarterly performance reviews.
At the last review, my boss advised the career aspirations section was optional. However they have now done a backflip and all questions must be answered. Very thoroughly. No exceptions.
Anyway, the questions are along the lines of where do you want to be in 1-2 years, 3-5 years, 5-10 years, and how can the organisation support to you to best achieve your goals.
I am stumped about what to write. Reality is that I have been looking for jobs elsewhere and applied for a couple (unsuccessfully) last year. If I was brutally honest in answering the questions on the review, I would say I wanted to leave and want to have a job at x level in a large state gov dept in 1-2 years, y level in 3-5 years and z level in 5-10 years and the organisation could help me by sending me on a few courses that I can add to my resume.
I'm not going to write that down, but am stumped as to what would constitute an acceptable answer.
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