Songbird
She rules her life like a bird in flight
Well good.
At least it served some purpose.
It made me feel better about the many times I've misunderstood posts. Thanks for that comfort.
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Well good.
At least it served some purpose.
oh.
um...
my bad.
**Please pay no attention to the hooded man with egg on his face***
OK, I'll be getting my doctorate soon and I'm wondering what is more effective.
#1 Dr. Angellous, Ph.D.
#2 Angellous, Ph.D.
Or just nothing at all.
I'm in academic circles as well as professional circles, working with churches.
In academic circles, it's usually nothing at all, but always accompanied by the position one has:
Angellous
Professor of New Testament
Evangellous Divinity School
But if one is not a professor, or if one simply prefers it, it's #2.
In the professional circles, it's always Dr. X, degree letters.
But there are plenty of people who mix and match.
What's a daddy to do?
Geeze, I wish you'd come back here.Angellous-Evangellous PHD, BJS..Beef Jerky Saleman
AHHHH HA HA HA LOL LOL
That strikes me as a bit silly, especially in this context.
I was just letting "Angellous" serve as a form example without attributing any accomplishments or titles to that name.
If someone is confused about that, and thinks that Angellous is anything more, that cannot possibly be my problem.
(and let the reader know that I would incessantly and relentlessly make fun of their stupidity)
doppelgänger;2898029 said:The letters are pretentious. What's relevant, professionally, is conveying useful information about your actual position/occupation.
So I'd recommend, for example
Angellous Evangellous
Associate Professor
New Testament Studies
[email protected]
OK, I'll be getting my doctorate soon and I'm wondering what is more effective.
#1 Dr. Angellous, Ph.D.
#2 Angellous, Ph.D.
Or just nothing at all.
I'm in academic circles as well as professional circles, working with churches.
In academic circles, it's usually nothing at all, but always accompanied by the position one has:
Angellous
Professor of New Testament
Evangellous Divinity School
But if one is not a professor, or if one simply prefers it, it's #2.
In the professional circles, it's always Dr. X, degree letters.
But there are plenty of people who mix and match.
What's a daddy to do?
Whenever I see a "PhD" suffix, I think "That guy prolly drives a Corvette, puts lifts in his shoes, does a comb over, uses big words when a diminutivePersonally, I don't see anything wrong with putting "PhD" after the name.
I do agree that in non-academic circles, the "Dr." bit might come off as pretentious.
Whenever I see a "PhD" suffix, I think "That guy prolly drives a Corvette, puts lifts in his shoes, does a comb over, uses big words when a diminutive
one will do, stuffs socks into his codpiece, wants pectoral implants, buys snooty wine, watches "films", & pretends to be above watching TV.".
I recommend......
Angellous Evangellous....you got a problem wit dat!?!
"P.Eng" serves a very real purpose....other than just impressing the babes.I may just be used to my industry. In my line of work, if you're a professional engineer, you put "P.Eng" after your name; if you're a certified engineering technologist, you put "CET"; everyone else puts their degree.
"P.Eng" serves a very real purpose....other than just impressing the babes.
It's easier to get work testifying in court when one has the "Professional Engineer" designation.
I should'a tooked the test while I was fresh out'a school.And the clients like seeing it, since it reassures them that they know who to sue if things go wrong on the project.
Though listing you're an associate professor already conveys to people your relevant qualifications. The Ph.D is not as pretentious as calling yourself "Dr.", I agree.Personally, I don't see anything wrong with putting "PhD" after the name.
I do agree that in non-academic circles, the "Dr." bit might come off as pretentious.