A warm welcome from CSRnation, thanks for joining.
please join the Court reporters group to your right.
just click "Cour Reporters" and "Request an invite"
this is our 1st week, give it some time, it should get very exciting around here.
thanks for joining.
Just a heads up. if you look at the top of your page to the left, you will see a person icon and a mail icon, click on the little guy and add me to your friends list (assuming you would want to, lol).
also, you can send private messages if ever need be.
you can add pictures, music and videos to your page.
if you have any questions please let me know
Well, now I"m working in NJ, but when I started reporting I worked for Bob, so I was dying to ask you, since you're from the NYC area, about Bob. BTW, do you know Maureen McCormick? She was a fantastic reporter and she would talk about the unions. What about Marilyn Morrison or Abe Zimmerman/Zimmer?
As far as captioning training goes, there are only a handful.
I have heard great things about Caption Masters, which is run by Judy Brentano. www.educaption.net
There is NJ Captions, which is run by Jenifer Bonfilio. www.njcaptions.com
There is a CR school called TextStream Institute which is owned by a woman named Rhonda Zacharias, who is an excellent court reporter/captioner, but due to an injury had to stop writing. She does individual training and may be able to tailor make a program for you. www.textstreaminstitute.com.
Anissa Niernberger, the creator of Dictionary Jumpstart and also a long-time captioner has trained people in the past. She may know of someone. www.dictionaryjumpstart.com
I had excellent one-on-one training from Janet Cassidy Burr, but unfortunately I cannot find her website and I think she may have retired from training. You might try Googling her name to see if anything pops up. She used to have a website.
Not sure where you are in your training or career, but I would highly recommend getting private lessons rather than just a course on captioning, and "I believe" the above listed all fit the private lesson type category.
Transitioning from court reporting or captioning/CART is the type of learning where the student needs personal attention. There are so many tips and tricks that one can only learn from someone who is actually doing the job. Writing clean and fast on the machine is only part of it.
Hope this info is useful to you. If you have any other questions, I would be glad to help if I can.
Anita, If you join the Total Eclipse group here, your Eclipse questions get posted to all its members. Right now there are ...I forget. Over 60??? We need to get more questions going over there with such a big group! Hope you found your timecode answer!
Hi, Anita. If you are a member of the NCRA, please help us fight the motion. If you, in any way, could afford to go to the annual convention, please do so and vote YES on the Motion to Rescind. Please also post your response to "Concerned Student" in the forum, as I know there are many reporters out there who feel that deposition reporters cannot be replaced. You are a living example of, yes, WE CAN be replaced! We need all the help we can get to spread the word that, YES, our profession is indeed threatened. Thanks, Anita. I apologize if I have bothered you, but I have to try to do whatever I can to help save "us."
Hi Anita! I read your comment that you wrote to Monti, and although i am not a court reporter yet, i think i have an answer to your question. You know, so many court reporters graduate from school not knowing what to accept out there in the real world. I hear girls in my school all the time say that when they graduate, they would take any job because they have bills, tuition to pay back etc... They have also said they heard that its slow right now so they are willing to take anything. So i believe these are the people that are taking these low paying jobs, but the truth is, the schools don't tell you not to take a job, especially when you first graduate, instead they tell you to accept whatever is being offered until you gain enough experience and can run with the big dogs. Like Monti said, one job offered him $25.00 an hour and he said "no" but to some people that's better than nothing. Another reason, some of these newly reporter don't know what a decent pay rate is. When you graduate, the schools don't tell you a ballpark figure of what you should be making and right now, how could they with the economy nose is diving downwards instead of upwards.
I hope this is the reason and the only reason. Talk to you soon :)
Hi Anita!
Thank you for your inquiry, but I am unable to accept new clients at this time. I am committed to other work until after Thanksgiving. Please keep me in mind for future scoping work.
Kelli Combs (admin)
please join the Court reporters group to your right.
just click "Cour Reporters" and "Request an invite"
this is our 1st week, give it some time, it should get very exciting around here.
thanks for joining.
Dec 17, 2007
Kelli Combs (admin)
also, you can send private messages if ever need be.
you can add pictures, music and videos to your page.
if you have any questions please let me know
Dec 17, 2007
Kelli Combs (admin)
Dec 17, 2007
Fran DiBella
Dec 20, 2007
Cathryn Bauer
Jan 22, 2008
Fran DiBella
Jan 22, 2008
Sheldon Singh
Dave should be in contact with you shortly.
Thanks,
Sheldon
Sep 17, 2008
Rebecca Callow
As far as captioning training goes, there are only a handful.
I have heard great things about Caption Masters, which is run by Judy Brentano. www.educaption.net
There is NJ Captions, which is run by Jenifer Bonfilio. www.njcaptions.com
There is a CR school called TextStream Institute which is owned by a woman named Rhonda Zacharias, who is an excellent court reporter/captioner, but due to an injury had to stop writing. She does individual training and may be able to tailor make a program for you. www.textstreaminstitute.com.
Anissa Niernberger, the creator of Dictionary Jumpstart and also a long-time captioner has trained people in the past. She may know of someone. www.dictionaryjumpstart.com
I had excellent one-on-one training from Janet Cassidy Burr, but unfortunately I cannot find her website and I think she may have retired from training. You might try Googling her name to see if anything pops up. She used to have a website.
Not sure where you are in your training or career, but I would highly recommend getting private lessons rather than just a course on captioning, and "I believe" the above listed all fit the private lesson type category.
Transitioning from court reporting or captioning/CART is the type of learning where the student needs personal attention. There are so many tips and tricks that one can only learn from someone who is actually doing the job. Writing clean and fast on the machine is only part of it.
Hope this info is useful to you. If you have any other questions, I would be glad to help if I can.
Dec 19, 2008
Jenny Griffin, RMR CRR CCRR CRC
Feb 23, 2009
Kelli Combs (admin)
If you think its worth bringing it back I can put it back?
let me know.
thanks
Mar 18, 2009
Quyen
May 5, 2009
Roger Flygare
Thank you,
Roger Flygare
May 5, 2009
Kwanna Collins
I hope this is the reason and the only reason. Talk to you soon :)
Jul 17, 2009
Kyung
Jul 28, 2009
Tricia Gemmill
Aug 7, 2009
Linda Troxel
Thank you for your inquiry, but I am unable to accept new clients at this time. I am committed to other work until after Thanksgiving. Please keep me in mind for future scoping work.
Thank you,
Linda
Oct 8, 2009