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Photogrammetric Technician

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Decision Making

You have been hired for your first job as a photogrammetric technician and you are very eager to make a good impression. You were hired with a three-month probationary period. At the end of that time, your employer will decide whether to keep you on at a higher salary or let you go.

Therefore, you want your supervisor to be pleased with your work and to recommend that you be hired. But there is a problem. The company is very busy and you have a lot of work to do. People in the office joke that when a project is assigned, "They want it yesterday!" There is a lot of pressure on you to get your projects done quickly.

Your job requires that you extract a lot of detailed information from the map. You are collecting massive volumes of data, and you must locate and correctly identify streams, buildings, fields, roads, hydro right of ways and many other items and places. All this is very time-consuming. You worry that you will not be finished by the deadline that you were given.

You think to yourself, "I could take a shortcut. I could spend less time trying to extract this information. I could sort of 'guess' a little about some of the details or I could just skip some sections of the map. Probably no one would ever notice and I would get finished on time."

What do you do?

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