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NO SHORT-CUTS TO CIT

1st October 1987, Page 34
1st October 1987
Page 34
Page 34, 1st October 1987 — NO SHORT-CUTS TO CIT
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Which of the following most accurately describes the problem?

Keywords :

• I feel I must comment on your anonymous writer's letter (Dear Sir, CM 10-16 September 1987), with what I can only interpret as a "short-cut" approach to CIT membership.

As most members will know a large proportion of members have indeed entered to Associate, Associate Membership, and Membership grades by the shortest possible route, taking nine separate subjects, sitting 29 hours of examinations and studying at home, with supplemented polytechnic attendance, to obtain Corporate Membership.

Your writer should know that this is a hard and long route to follow, but there is no substitute for formal instruction for what you will otherwise never learn by experience.

I personally feel that the Institute does not get the recognition that it deserves, indeed most operators in any sector of haulage claim they have never heard of it, will not recognise it in the workaday world, and as in my case also, expect most individuals to pay for tuition themselves. However, for the individual's own peace of mind as a sure basis for management, I am sure that the hard route was the most rewarding. I can say I earned my membership.

RT Hanson MCIT Dudley West Midlands

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