How to deal with an internship certificate draft full of obvious spelling mistakes?

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I left an internship of three months in a small IT company and have finally received a draft for the internship certificate to check back per email.



The person who wrote it works in the accounting department, so she isn't familiar with the technical stuff I did. She is also the boss' wife.



While the content is really good and positive, I have several concerns. She made quite a few spelling and grammar mistakes. The list of things I did wasn't entirely correct. She emphasized unimportant stuff while leaving the interesting things out.



I sent her mail, kindly pointing out the proposed content changes. I attached a revised version of the document, where I silently corrected all the spelling mistakes as well.



She answered with a new draft where my changes to the list of actions were applied, but all the typos remain.



What should I do now? I feel it's impolite and could be interpreted in a bad way to point out mistakes to a superior person although I'm not working there any more. On the other side, I doubt that the certificate would have any positive value in this shape and can be more harmful than good, if send to future recruiters.







share|improve this question

















  • 1




    This question is related, but there we are talking about few minor mistakes. The great number of mistakes in my document draft are really obvious. workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/2191/…
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:31






  • 1




    Why do you care? Is it customary where you are to require certificates to prove you worked somewhere? And all that effort for only 3 months? I wouldn't ever send a document like that to a recruiter, even if it was a literary masterpiece. Edit: I checked your profile, are you talking about an Arbeitszeugnis? If so, those have negligible value anyway from what I know of them.
    – Lilienthal♦
    May 19 '16 at 5:49











  • @Lilienthal Not 100% sure how to translate it, other similar words would be "internship reference" or "letter of recommendation".
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 6:22






  • 2




    So it is an Arbeitszeugnis that you're asking about?
    – Lilienthal♦
    May 19 '16 at 6:38











  • This is indeed a bad situation if you need a "re-revision". I would just politely ask again and point to the spelling mistakes like. It's very important to make 100% clear that it's nothing personal but that it's very important for you. If you didn't do it in your first mail, you can also attach why you can't do it by yourself, plus adding some more excuses. Thats what I would do.
    – Otto V.
    May 20 '16 at 10:16
















up vote
10
down vote

favorite












I left an internship of three months in a small IT company and have finally received a draft for the internship certificate to check back per email.



The person who wrote it works in the accounting department, so she isn't familiar with the technical stuff I did. She is also the boss' wife.



While the content is really good and positive, I have several concerns. She made quite a few spelling and grammar mistakes. The list of things I did wasn't entirely correct. She emphasized unimportant stuff while leaving the interesting things out.



I sent her mail, kindly pointing out the proposed content changes. I attached a revised version of the document, where I silently corrected all the spelling mistakes as well.



She answered with a new draft where my changes to the list of actions were applied, but all the typos remain.



What should I do now? I feel it's impolite and could be interpreted in a bad way to point out mistakes to a superior person although I'm not working there any more. On the other side, I doubt that the certificate would have any positive value in this shape and can be more harmful than good, if send to future recruiters.







share|improve this question

















  • 1




    This question is related, but there we are talking about few minor mistakes. The great number of mistakes in my document draft are really obvious. workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/2191/…
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:31






  • 1




    Why do you care? Is it customary where you are to require certificates to prove you worked somewhere? And all that effort for only 3 months? I wouldn't ever send a document like that to a recruiter, even if it was a literary masterpiece. Edit: I checked your profile, are you talking about an Arbeitszeugnis? If so, those have negligible value anyway from what I know of them.
    – Lilienthal♦
    May 19 '16 at 5:49











  • @Lilienthal Not 100% sure how to translate it, other similar words would be "internship reference" or "letter of recommendation".
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 6:22






  • 2




    So it is an Arbeitszeugnis that you're asking about?
    – Lilienthal♦
    May 19 '16 at 6:38











  • This is indeed a bad situation if you need a "re-revision". I would just politely ask again and point to the spelling mistakes like. It's very important to make 100% clear that it's nothing personal but that it's very important for you. If you didn't do it in your first mail, you can also attach why you can't do it by yourself, plus adding some more excuses. Thats what I would do.
    – Otto V.
    May 20 '16 at 10:16












up vote
10
down vote

favorite









up vote
10
down vote

favorite











I left an internship of three months in a small IT company and have finally received a draft for the internship certificate to check back per email.



The person who wrote it works in the accounting department, so she isn't familiar with the technical stuff I did. She is also the boss' wife.



While the content is really good and positive, I have several concerns. She made quite a few spelling and grammar mistakes. The list of things I did wasn't entirely correct. She emphasized unimportant stuff while leaving the interesting things out.



I sent her mail, kindly pointing out the proposed content changes. I attached a revised version of the document, where I silently corrected all the spelling mistakes as well.



She answered with a new draft where my changes to the list of actions were applied, but all the typos remain.



What should I do now? I feel it's impolite and could be interpreted in a bad way to point out mistakes to a superior person although I'm not working there any more. On the other side, I doubt that the certificate would have any positive value in this shape and can be more harmful than good, if send to future recruiters.







share|improve this question













I left an internship of three months in a small IT company and have finally received a draft for the internship certificate to check back per email.



The person who wrote it works in the accounting department, so she isn't familiar with the technical stuff I did. She is also the boss' wife.



While the content is really good and positive, I have several concerns. She made quite a few spelling and grammar mistakes. The list of things I did wasn't entirely correct. She emphasized unimportant stuff while leaving the interesting things out.



I sent her mail, kindly pointing out the proposed content changes. I attached a revised version of the document, where I silently corrected all the spelling mistakes as well.



She answered with a new draft where my changes to the list of actions were applied, but all the typos remain.



What should I do now? I feel it's impolite and could be interpreted in a bad way to point out mistakes to a superior person although I'm not working there any more. On the other side, I doubt that the certificate would have any positive value in this shape and can be more harmful than good, if send to future recruiters.









share|improve this question












share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 19 '16 at 11:23









atk

2,26411420




2,26411420









asked May 19 '16 at 5:20









Byte Commander

153310




153310







  • 1




    This question is related, but there we are talking about few minor mistakes. The great number of mistakes in my document draft are really obvious. workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/2191/…
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:31






  • 1




    Why do you care? Is it customary where you are to require certificates to prove you worked somewhere? And all that effort for only 3 months? I wouldn't ever send a document like that to a recruiter, even if it was a literary masterpiece. Edit: I checked your profile, are you talking about an Arbeitszeugnis? If so, those have negligible value anyway from what I know of them.
    – Lilienthal♦
    May 19 '16 at 5:49











  • @Lilienthal Not 100% sure how to translate it, other similar words would be "internship reference" or "letter of recommendation".
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 6:22






  • 2




    So it is an Arbeitszeugnis that you're asking about?
    – Lilienthal♦
    May 19 '16 at 6:38











  • This is indeed a bad situation if you need a "re-revision". I would just politely ask again and point to the spelling mistakes like. It's very important to make 100% clear that it's nothing personal but that it's very important for you. If you didn't do it in your first mail, you can also attach why you can't do it by yourself, plus adding some more excuses. Thats what I would do.
    – Otto V.
    May 20 '16 at 10:16












  • 1




    This question is related, but there we are talking about few minor mistakes. The great number of mistakes in my document draft are really obvious. workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/2191/…
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:31






  • 1




    Why do you care? Is it customary where you are to require certificates to prove you worked somewhere? And all that effort for only 3 months? I wouldn't ever send a document like that to a recruiter, even if it was a literary masterpiece. Edit: I checked your profile, are you talking about an Arbeitszeugnis? If so, those have negligible value anyway from what I know of them.
    – Lilienthal♦
    May 19 '16 at 5:49











  • @Lilienthal Not 100% sure how to translate it, other similar words would be "internship reference" or "letter of recommendation".
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 6:22






  • 2




    So it is an Arbeitszeugnis that you're asking about?
    – Lilienthal♦
    May 19 '16 at 6:38











  • This is indeed a bad situation if you need a "re-revision". I would just politely ask again and point to the spelling mistakes like. It's very important to make 100% clear that it's nothing personal but that it's very important for you. If you didn't do it in your first mail, you can also attach why you can't do it by yourself, plus adding some more excuses. Thats what I would do.
    – Otto V.
    May 20 '16 at 10:16







1




1




This question is related, but there we are talking about few minor mistakes. The great number of mistakes in my document draft are really obvious. workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/2191/…
– Byte Commander
May 19 '16 at 5:31




This question is related, but there we are talking about few minor mistakes. The great number of mistakes in my document draft are really obvious. workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/2191/…
– Byte Commander
May 19 '16 at 5:31




1




1




Why do you care? Is it customary where you are to require certificates to prove you worked somewhere? And all that effort for only 3 months? I wouldn't ever send a document like that to a recruiter, even if it was a literary masterpiece. Edit: I checked your profile, are you talking about an Arbeitszeugnis? If so, those have negligible value anyway from what I know of them.
– Lilienthal♦
May 19 '16 at 5:49





Why do you care? Is it customary where you are to require certificates to prove you worked somewhere? And all that effort for only 3 months? I wouldn't ever send a document like that to a recruiter, even if it was a literary masterpiece. Edit: I checked your profile, are you talking about an Arbeitszeugnis? If so, those have negligible value anyway from what I know of them.
– Lilienthal♦
May 19 '16 at 5:49













@Lilienthal Not 100% sure how to translate it, other similar words would be "internship reference" or "letter of recommendation".
– Byte Commander
May 19 '16 at 6:22




@Lilienthal Not 100% sure how to translate it, other similar words would be "internship reference" or "letter of recommendation".
– Byte Commander
May 19 '16 at 6:22




2




2




So it is an Arbeitszeugnis that you're asking about?
– Lilienthal♦
May 19 '16 at 6:38





So it is an Arbeitszeugnis that you're asking about?
– Lilienthal♦
May 19 '16 at 6:38













This is indeed a bad situation if you need a "re-revision". I would just politely ask again and point to the spelling mistakes like. It's very important to make 100% clear that it's nothing personal but that it's very important for you. If you didn't do it in your first mail, you can also attach why you can't do it by yourself, plus adding some more excuses. Thats what I would do.
– Otto V.
May 20 '16 at 10:16




This is indeed a bad situation if you need a "re-revision". I would just politely ask again and point to the spelling mistakes like. It's very important to make 100% clear that it's nothing personal but that it's very important for you. If you didn't do it in your first mail, you can also attach why you can't do it by yourself, plus adding some more excuses. Thats what I would do.
– Otto V.
May 20 '16 at 10:16










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
6
down vote



accepted










While Kilisi and Lilienthal have both pointed out it is not really that important, I can understand your concern and it is something I myself would fret about. However, I'd view it as an opportunity to practice what could potentially be an uncomfortable conversation.



There is no way around correcting these mistakes without pointing them out to the person who made them. This situation will come up in your professional life a lot. Deal with it.



Politely approach him/her and say something to the tone of:




"Hey, I took the liberty to correct some spelling/grammar mistakes in
this document. I hope you don't mind printing/emailing/issuing it to
me again. SORRY that I did not point them out earlier and caused
double the work for you."




How you do this in detail is up to you, but you really should have the interpersonal skills to point out other people's mistakes, without humiliating or offending them.



Good luck.






share|improve this answer





















  • "it is something I myself would fret about" - did you mean the opposite? If you would not fret about something it generally means you would not give it much import. Maybe that's what you meant by that.
    – Brandin
    May 19 '16 at 12:13






  • 1




    I think @Underdetermined means exactly what they said. Even if it's technically not super important, both OP and Underdetermined are bothered by documents with numerous spelling errors. They understand why OP would fret about it, and are offering a way to kindly suggest to the reference that they correct the mistakes.
    – Keiki
    May 19 '16 at 13:56

















up vote
4
down vote













The certificate is valid, I deal with people from all sorts of places the majority of whom don't have English as a first language. I'm less interested in the spelling and grammar of their previous employer than their accomplishments.



So, so long as it's a positive document and portrays you well, I wouldn't worry about it too much. Not enough to go back a second time for a rewrite anyway.






share|improve this answer





















  • Maybe I should add that it's not in English but German, which is the native language of both of us. And some of the mistakes are really obvious and almost hurting...
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:28











  • Unsure why that would make a difference, most applications and references I see are not in English.... are Germans particularly pedantic on spelling and grammar?
    – Kilisi
    May 19 '16 at 5:33






  • 1




    As it's not such an international language as English (which means less non-native speakers) and we have quite many sometimes pretty complicated grammar rules etc, I personally would say yes, it is more important than in English.
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:34







  • 1




    @Kilisi they sort of are. In my experience so far it is when you apply for a Company, but once proven it becomes considerably less important. Germany company's I have seen value foreign education less than a, well nearly anny German education.
    – Raoul Mensink
    May 19 '16 at 7:03






  • 1




    On the other hand, if I were handed a letter of reference with that many mistakes, it would make me wonder whether the candidate had good enough judgment to avoid working for companies staffed by such low-caliber people.
    – Blrfl
    May 19 '16 at 12:11










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2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
6
down vote



accepted










While Kilisi and Lilienthal have both pointed out it is not really that important, I can understand your concern and it is something I myself would fret about. However, I'd view it as an opportunity to practice what could potentially be an uncomfortable conversation.



There is no way around correcting these mistakes without pointing them out to the person who made them. This situation will come up in your professional life a lot. Deal with it.



Politely approach him/her and say something to the tone of:




"Hey, I took the liberty to correct some spelling/grammar mistakes in
this document. I hope you don't mind printing/emailing/issuing it to
me again. SORRY that I did not point them out earlier and caused
double the work for you."




How you do this in detail is up to you, but you really should have the interpersonal skills to point out other people's mistakes, without humiliating or offending them.



Good luck.






share|improve this answer





















  • "it is something I myself would fret about" - did you mean the opposite? If you would not fret about something it generally means you would not give it much import. Maybe that's what you meant by that.
    – Brandin
    May 19 '16 at 12:13






  • 1




    I think @Underdetermined means exactly what they said. Even if it's technically not super important, both OP and Underdetermined are bothered by documents with numerous spelling errors. They understand why OP would fret about it, and are offering a way to kindly suggest to the reference that they correct the mistakes.
    – Keiki
    May 19 '16 at 13:56














up vote
6
down vote



accepted










While Kilisi and Lilienthal have both pointed out it is not really that important, I can understand your concern and it is something I myself would fret about. However, I'd view it as an opportunity to practice what could potentially be an uncomfortable conversation.



There is no way around correcting these mistakes without pointing them out to the person who made them. This situation will come up in your professional life a lot. Deal with it.



Politely approach him/her and say something to the tone of:




"Hey, I took the liberty to correct some spelling/grammar mistakes in
this document. I hope you don't mind printing/emailing/issuing it to
me again. SORRY that I did not point them out earlier and caused
double the work for you."




How you do this in detail is up to you, but you really should have the interpersonal skills to point out other people's mistakes, without humiliating or offending them.



Good luck.






share|improve this answer





















  • "it is something I myself would fret about" - did you mean the opposite? If you would not fret about something it generally means you would not give it much import. Maybe that's what you meant by that.
    – Brandin
    May 19 '16 at 12:13






  • 1




    I think @Underdetermined means exactly what they said. Even if it's technically not super important, both OP and Underdetermined are bothered by documents with numerous spelling errors. They understand why OP would fret about it, and are offering a way to kindly suggest to the reference that they correct the mistakes.
    – Keiki
    May 19 '16 at 13:56












up vote
6
down vote



accepted







up vote
6
down vote



accepted






While Kilisi and Lilienthal have both pointed out it is not really that important, I can understand your concern and it is something I myself would fret about. However, I'd view it as an opportunity to practice what could potentially be an uncomfortable conversation.



There is no way around correcting these mistakes without pointing them out to the person who made them. This situation will come up in your professional life a lot. Deal with it.



Politely approach him/her and say something to the tone of:




"Hey, I took the liberty to correct some spelling/grammar mistakes in
this document. I hope you don't mind printing/emailing/issuing it to
me again. SORRY that I did not point them out earlier and caused
double the work for you."




How you do this in detail is up to you, but you really should have the interpersonal skills to point out other people's mistakes, without humiliating or offending them.



Good luck.






share|improve this answer













While Kilisi and Lilienthal have both pointed out it is not really that important, I can understand your concern and it is something I myself would fret about. However, I'd view it as an opportunity to practice what could potentially be an uncomfortable conversation.



There is no way around correcting these mistakes without pointing them out to the person who made them. This situation will come up in your professional life a lot. Deal with it.



Politely approach him/her and say something to the tone of:




"Hey, I took the liberty to correct some spelling/grammar mistakes in
this document. I hope you don't mind printing/emailing/issuing it to
me again. SORRY that I did not point them out earlier and caused
double the work for you."




How you do this in detail is up to you, but you really should have the interpersonal skills to point out other people's mistakes, without humiliating or offending them.



Good luck.







share|improve this answer













share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer











answered May 19 '16 at 6:18









Underdetermined

1,071612




1,071612











  • "it is something I myself would fret about" - did you mean the opposite? If you would not fret about something it generally means you would not give it much import. Maybe that's what you meant by that.
    – Brandin
    May 19 '16 at 12:13






  • 1




    I think @Underdetermined means exactly what they said. Even if it's technically not super important, both OP and Underdetermined are bothered by documents with numerous spelling errors. They understand why OP would fret about it, and are offering a way to kindly suggest to the reference that they correct the mistakes.
    – Keiki
    May 19 '16 at 13:56
















  • "it is something I myself would fret about" - did you mean the opposite? If you would not fret about something it generally means you would not give it much import. Maybe that's what you meant by that.
    – Brandin
    May 19 '16 at 12:13






  • 1




    I think @Underdetermined means exactly what they said. Even if it's technically not super important, both OP and Underdetermined are bothered by documents with numerous spelling errors. They understand why OP would fret about it, and are offering a way to kindly suggest to the reference that they correct the mistakes.
    – Keiki
    May 19 '16 at 13:56















"it is something I myself would fret about" - did you mean the opposite? If you would not fret about something it generally means you would not give it much import. Maybe that's what you meant by that.
– Brandin
May 19 '16 at 12:13




"it is something I myself would fret about" - did you mean the opposite? If you would not fret about something it generally means you would not give it much import. Maybe that's what you meant by that.
– Brandin
May 19 '16 at 12:13




1




1




I think @Underdetermined means exactly what they said. Even if it's technically not super important, both OP and Underdetermined are bothered by documents with numerous spelling errors. They understand why OP would fret about it, and are offering a way to kindly suggest to the reference that they correct the mistakes.
– Keiki
May 19 '16 at 13:56




I think @Underdetermined means exactly what they said. Even if it's technically not super important, both OP and Underdetermined are bothered by documents with numerous spelling errors. They understand why OP would fret about it, and are offering a way to kindly suggest to the reference that they correct the mistakes.
– Keiki
May 19 '16 at 13:56












up vote
4
down vote













The certificate is valid, I deal with people from all sorts of places the majority of whom don't have English as a first language. I'm less interested in the spelling and grammar of their previous employer than their accomplishments.



So, so long as it's a positive document and portrays you well, I wouldn't worry about it too much. Not enough to go back a second time for a rewrite anyway.






share|improve this answer





















  • Maybe I should add that it's not in English but German, which is the native language of both of us. And some of the mistakes are really obvious and almost hurting...
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:28











  • Unsure why that would make a difference, most applications and references I see are not in English.... are Germans particularly pedantic on spelling and grammar?
    – Kilisi
    May 19 '16 at 5:33






  • 1




    As it's not such an international language as English (which means less non-native speakers) and we have quite many sometimes pretty complicated grammar rules etc, I personally would say yes, it is more important than in English.
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:34







  • 1




    @Kilisi they sort of are. In my experience so far it is when you apply for a Company, but once proven it becomes considerably less important. Germany company's I have seen value foreign education less than a, well nearly anny German education.
    – Raoul Mensink
    May 19 '16 at 7:03






  • 1




    On the other hand, if I were handed a letter of reference with that many mistakes, it would make me wonder whether the candidate had good enough judgment to avoid working for companies staffed by such low-caliber people.
    – Blrfl
    May 19 '16 at 12:11














up vote
4
down vote













The certificate is valid, I deal with people from all sorts of places the majority of whom don't have English as a first language. I'm less interested in the spelling and grammar of their previous employer than their accomplishments.



So, so long as it's a positive document and portrays you well, I wouldn't worry about it too much. Not enough to go back a second time for a rewrite anyway.






share|improve this answer





















  • Maybe I should add that it's not in English but German, which is the native language of both of us. And some of the mistakes are really obvious and almost hurting...
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:28











  • Unsure why that would make a difference, most applications and references I see are not in English.... are Germans particularly pedantic on spelling and grammar?
    – Kilisi
    May 19 '16 at 5:33






  • 1




    As it's not such an international language as English (which means less non-native speakers) and we have quite many sometimes pretty complicated grammar rules etc, I personally would say yes, it is more important than in English.
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:34







  • 1




    @Kilisi they sort of are. In my experience so far it is when you apply for a Company, but once proven it becomes considerably less important. Germany company's I have seen value foreign education less than a, well nearly anny German education.
    – Raoul Mensink
    May 19 '16 at 7:03






  • 1




    On the other hand, if I were handed a letter of reference with that many mistakes, it would make me wonder whether the candidate had good enough judgment to avoid working for companies staffed by such low-caliber people.
    – Blrfl
    May 19 '16 at 12:11












up vote
4
down vote










up vote
4
down vote









The certificate is valid, I deal with people from all sorts of places the majority of whom don't have English as a first language. I'm less interested in the spelling and grammar of their previous employer than their accomplishments.



So, so long as it's a positive document and portrays you well, I wouldn't worry about it too much. Not enough to go back a second time for a rewrite anyway.






share|improve this answer













The certificate is valid, I deal with people from all sorts of places the majority of whom don't have English as a first language. I'm less interested in the spelling and grammar of their previous employer than their accomplishments.



So, so long as it's a positive document and portrays you well, I wouldn't worry about it too much. Not enough to go back a second time for a rewrite anyway.







share|improve this answer













share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer











answered May 19 '16 at 5:25









Kilisi

94.5k50216376




94.5k50216376











  • Maybe I should add that it's not in English but German, which is the native language of both of us. And some of the mistakes are really obvious and almost hurting...
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:28











  • Unsure why that would make a difference, most applications and references I see are not in English.... are Germans particularly pedantic on spelling and grammar?
    – Kilisi
    May 19 '16 at 5:33






  • 1




    As it's not such an international language as English (which means less non-native speakers) and we have quite many sometimes pretty complicated grammar rules etc, I personally would say yes, it is more important than in English.
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:34







  • 1




    @Kilisi they sort of are. In my experience so far it is when you apply for a Company, but once proven it becomes considerably less important. Germany company's I have seen value foreign education less than a, well nearly anny German education.
    – Raoul Mensink
    May 19 '16 at 7:03






  • 1




    On the other hand, if I were handed a letter of reference with that many mistakes, it would make me wonder whether the candidate had good enough judgment to avoid working for companies staffed by such low-caliber people.
    – Blrfl
    May 19 '16 at 12:11
















  • Maybe I should add that it's not in English but German, which is the native language of both of us. And some of the mistakes are really obvious and almost hurting...
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:28











  • Unsure why that would make a difference, most applications and references I see are not in English.... are Germans particularly pedantic on spelling and grammar?
    – Kilisi
    May 19 '16 at 5:33






  • 1




    As it's not such an international language as English (which means less non-native speakers) and we have quite many sometimes pretty complicated grammar rules etc, I personally would say yes, it is more important than in English.
    – Byte Commander
    May 19 '16 at 5:34







  • 1




    @Kilisi they sort of are. In my experience so far it is when you apply for a Company, but once proven it becomes considerably less important. Germany company's I have seen value foreign education less than a, well nearly anny German education.
    – Raoul Mensink
    May 19 '16 at 7:03






  • 1




    On the other hand, if I were handed a letter of reference with that many mistakes, it would make me wonder whether the candidate had good enough judgment to avoid working for companies staffed by such low-caliber people.
    – Blrfl
    May 19 '16 at 12:11















Maybe I should add that it's not in English but German, which is the native language of both of us. And some of the mistakes are really obvious and almost hurting...
– Byte Commander
May 19 '16 at 5:28





Maybe I should add that it's not in English but German, which is the native language of both of us. And some of the mistakes are really obvious and almost hurting...
– Byte Commander
May 19 '16 at 5:28













Unsure why that would make a difference, most applications and references I see are not in English.... are Germans particularly pedantic on spelling and grammar?
– Kilisi
May 19 '16 at 5:33




Unsure why that would make a difference, most applications and references I see are not in English.... are Germans particularly pedantic on spelling and grammar?
– Kilisi
May 19 '16 at 5:33




1




1




As it's not such an international language as English (which means less non-native speakers) and we have quite many sometimes pretty complicated grammar rules etc, I personally would say yes, it is more important than in English.
– Byte Commander
May 19 '16 at 5:34





As it's not such an international language as English (which means less non-native speakers) and we have quite many sometimes pretty complicated grammar rules etc, I personally would say yes, it is more important than in English.
– Byte Commander
May 19 '16 at 5:34





1




1




@Kilisi they sort of are. In my experience so far it is when you apply for a Company, but once proven it becomes considerably less important. Germany company's I have seen value foreign education less than a, well nearly anny German education.
– Raoul Mensink
May 19 '16 at 7:03




@Kilisi they sort of are. In my experience so far it is when you apply for a Company, but once proven it becomes considerably less important. Germany company's I have seen value foreign education less than a, well nearly anny German education.
– Raoul Mensink
May 19 '16 at 7:03




1




1




On the other hand, if I were handed a letter of reference with that many mistakes, it would make me wonder whether the candidate had good enough judgment to avoid working for companies staffed by such low-caliber people.
– Blrfl
May 19 '16 at 12:11




On the other hand, if I were handed a letter of reference with that many mistakes, it would make me wonder whether the candidate had good enough judgment to avoid working for companies staffed by such low-caliber people.
– Blrfl
May 19 '16 at 12:11












 

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