A Class on Designing Training Programs
- Feb 26, 2017
- 1 min read

If anyone tells you that designing a training program is easy, perhaps they are not creating the type of training program needed for the operation. I took a class while working towards my incomplete PhD: "Strategic Links for Successful Training TDL7002" and I received the lowest grade in all classes towards that degree. The B+ I received lowered my GPA, but the class was very valuable. I respected the instructor for the feedback I was given after each submission. The instructor gave reasons for the lower grades and informed me that I needed to add this or delete that, and he also asked for my response about why I had made the choice to put one section/topic of learning in front of another. In the end, I learned a great deal, which is why I'm not that upset about earning the grade that I did. What really bothers me, though, is when I receive a grade lower than expected and the instructor cannot tell me why...
Sabrina Santos. "Build Your Own Paper Models of Polish Modernist Buildings" 05 Nov 2015. ArchDaily. Accessed 26 Feb 2017. <http://www.archdaily.com/776461/zupagrafika-releases-paper-architecture-models-for-poland/>




















This really resonated with me! A B+ that actually taught you something is worth more than an A that taught you nothing. The point about instructors giving proper feedback is so underrated — how are students supposed to improve without knowing what went wrong? I was searching for expert programming assignment help when I stumbled on this but ended up reflecting on my own academic journey lol. The frustration of getting a low