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No wonder bosses say Gen Z are hard to manage: While 70% of boomers have zero tolerance for any level of tardiness, in Gen Z’s eyes, 10 minutes late is right on time.
To be at work on time is an implied obligation unless stated otherwise. It is a legal reason for discharge in cases when it is a demonstrable disregard of duty: repeated tardiness without compelling reasons, tardiness associated with other misconduct, and single inexcusable tardiness resulted in grave loss of employer's interests.
In this case, since everyone understands that a 9 p.m. party will actually start at around 10 p.m., no-one is inconvenienced when everyone arrives at 10 p.m. [5] In cultures that value punctuality, being late is seen as disrespectful of others' time and may be considered insulting.
The rules of work were thrown into the air when the pandemic first struck, like a game of 52-card pickup. And office workers found themselves at the epicenter of many new debates.
E.g. 10 dot is 10:00. The dot removes one academic quarter, so in the evening time "on the dot" is written "dot dot" to remove both quarters. Time given with minutes, such as 10:00 is always "on the dot". [11] At KTH Royal Institute of Technology the academic quarter is applied to lectures [12] but not to labs. [13]
In Norway, workers are entitled to a work break if they work for 5.5 hours. For every 8 hours, a worker is entitled to a 30 minute break. If the workplace does not have a break room, the break must be paid. If a worker works more than 2 hours after their regular hours, they are entitled to a paid 30 minute break. [6]
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No wonder bosses say Gen Z are hard to manage: While 70% of Boomers have zero tolerance for any level of tardiness, in Gen Z's eyes, 10 minutes late is right on time.