Your company and the recruiting firm are best represented
when prompt feedback is provided to interested candidates.
Not exact matches
Even
when feedback is negative, it
prompts an exercise in curious exploration to find out where things went wrong so that it doesn't happen again.
When someone does a good job on your team and you provide positive
feedback, it is an incredible
prompt.
Instant code of conduct
feedback when an employee «crosses a line,» either in business interactions or by expressing bias in their dealings with colleagues or customers (e.g., a beep
prompting a need to correct or stop a behavior).
The study authors suggest that this positive
feedback loop may have served an important role in evolution, by
prompting animals to fatten up
when they stumbled across calorically dense food in times of food scarcity.
For example, while guiding students through the learning process, teachers make decisions about components of explicit instruction, such as deciding how and
when to provide
prompts or
feedback when students make errors (King - Sears & Evmenova, 2007).
It also includes the pedagogy for delivering those materials
when teachers receive guidance on how to teach the curriculum, or
when software manages the pacing,
prompts, and
feedback that students receive as they engage with the materials.
The weak tactile
feedback was not as much of an issue with the Redmi Note 4, but with the Mi A1, the unsatisfying click on the power button often
prompted me to inadvertently half - click it again, which led to situations where the camera app opened up
when I expected the phone to have its screen off.
Warning signs of the confused intern include: not hearing back about an assignment while the intern is working on it (usually there's some kind of
feedback or status update volunteered); no progress made from an intern who is usually responsive;
when prompted for questions, the questions are disjointed from the project at hand (intern might not understand project enough to ask meaningful questions and doesn't want to admit they don't know where to start).