That’s what it seems like they were doing to me from discussions about their work.
definition of unskilled labor: “labor that requires relatively little or no training or experience for its satisfactory performance”
What I’ve read alice and chloe did:
booking flights
driving to places
renting transportation
cleaning up around the house
doing laundry
filling out forms
buying groceries
edit: Looked at the responsibilities on the job description. Reads like unskilled labor there to me. Especially how the story seems to be that even for filing miscellaneous forms the executive assistant got a ton of help from management and couldn’t do it on their own.
If you have a different opinion on what their work amounted to I’d be interested to hear it. But it’s definitely not even close to a crux for me.
Administrative assistants are generally considered skilled, and in the US are legally classified as such (more). I think you’re assuming a baseline level of professional skills that “unskilled” does not normally entail.
(Whether their work was skilled, semi-skilled, or unskilled is also not a crux for me: it’s pretty irrelevant to whether NL acted poorly. I just want accuracy.)
Separate from everything else, I’m confused why you’re glossing Alice and Chloe’s work as “unskilled labor”?
That’s what it seems like they were doing to me from discussions about their work.
definition of unskilled labor: “labor that requires relatively little or no training or experience for its satisfactory performance”
What I’ve read alice and chloe did:
booking flights
driving to places
renting transportation
cleaning up around the house
doing laundry
filling out forms
buying groceries
edit: Looked at the responsibilities on the job description. Reads like unskilled labor there to me. Especially how the story seems to be that even for filing miscellaneous forms the executive assistant got a ton of help from management and couldn’t do it on their own.
If you have a different opinion on what their work amounted to I’d be interested to hear it. But it’s definitely not even close to a crux for me.
Administrative assistants are generally considered skilled, and in the US are legally classified as such (more). I think you’re assuming a baseline level of professional skills that “unskilled” does not normally entail.
(Whether their work was skilled, semi-skilled, or unskilled is also not a crux for me: it’s pretty irrelevant to whether NL acted poorly. I just want accuracy.)