1. Group according to industries... never mind the number of persons per group, as long as the vast is divided into at least but not limited to general industrial sectors (e.g. Finance/Insurance, Partnership, Auditing Firms, Cooperatives, Banks, Gov't agencies, Corporation). If the persons per group are substantially many, you may still divide it according to specific entities (e.g. Banks: LandBank group and BDO group; Insurance: PhilAm Life group and Prudential Life group).
2. Present the report in any nontrivial way as possible as you can; show pictures, videos, role plays, interviews of the bosses, pseudo intermissions/commercials. The format is simple; render as follows: 1. Brief company profile 2. Work/technical experiences including some errands if there's any 3. Moral experiences 4. Reflection 5. If there's much time, add at your will.
3. Time is indispensable. Don't waste your time, thus, time limit for every group is a must.
4. The adjudicators/administering professors should be pampered so that flat one is at hand.
5. Be honest in your reports: if you just slacked and slept during your 250 hours, then so be it. Don't be so darn shy to share that the only things you did were the things unworthy to be mentioned here. Do not make the report boring by enumerating each specific steps you did in a single job (e.g. Filling up the form: I put the name, I filled the date then I filled again, and then I wrote the remarks, then I opened the computer by switching the "on" button then waited for 5 minutes and then I searched and searched... bottom line, I enjoyed my job). [you kiddin' me, idiot? Better version would be: I arrived early at the office and no one bothered to lend me some tasks so I waited. Upon waiting, an existential thought came upon me and an urge to ponder it succumbed me badly. At the end, I realized that it was time for me to go home. I already went home but the fundamental questions still burdened me so I just slept away my dissatisfaction. Clap clap...]
Disclaimer: The following suggestions do not reflect the host, the show, it's management, and the network.
PS:
6. Put your computerized daily journal in clean sheets of bond paper [preferably].
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