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View Full Version : How many of us are there?


CL
01-02-07, 13:54
Does anyone know how many members there are of the Forum?

Cleo

Baggybooks
01-02-07, 14:03
Malcolm? Julian? One of you must know.

:wink:

blobbyh
01-02-07, 14:35
Regularly, I'd say there are probably no more than fifteen or twenty of us! Some of us even feel able to offer advice, though I only ever do this where I feel competent. I can offer reasonable advice for Foundation and Intermediate stages, but tend to shy away from Technician where I am currently at myself! That level of advice I feel is for the MIP's and/or "proper" accountants like Peugeot.

Anyone else feel they have a level for offering competent advice?

Come forth all!

Regards,

Robert

Baggybooks
01-02-07, 14:47
Yes, but I wonder how many Forum members there are that don't post, just watch?

imported_Malcolm
01-02-07, 16:06
Can't tell you offhand, but there are several thousand forum users signed up.

Baggybooks
01-02-07, 16:08
Could the site cope if they were all logged on?


:cry:


Or would you and Julian leave the country?

CL
01-02-07, 16:42
Regularly, I'd say there are probably no more than fifteen or twenty of us! Some of us even feel able to offer advice, though I only ever do this where I feel competent. I can offer reasonable advice for Foundation and Intermediate stages, but tend to shy away from Technician where I am currently at myself! That level of advice I feel is for the MIP's and/or "proper" accountants like Peugeot.

Anyone else feel they have a level for offering competent advice?

Come forth all!

Regards,

Robert


But it seems to me that the advice isnt always limited by the level of qualification. Some students are more experienced than an AAt member.

imported_Malcolm
01-02-07, 16:44
I'll see you in my villa on the Costa Del Crime if that was the case :lol:

CL
01-02-07, 16:48
Apologes, just replied and re-read previous post and now get joke.

blobbyh
01-02-07, 17:16
What I was trying to say Cleo, is that it's harder to offer advice at your current study level if you don't quite fully understand it yourself - at this point.

I would assume that this is pretty much a standard principle of all teaching, in that ideally you ought to be more qualified/experienced in the subject than the student level you are teaching to based on the information being departed?

Robert

Baggybooks
01-02-07, 17:17
I think her point was that even students can offer 'non-student' like advice.

I know for a fact that you and I have a wealth of experience to share!!!

:oops:

CL
02-02-07, 09:28
That was exacly my point.

Still don't know how many forum members tehre are!