![]() They wanted someone associated and certified directly by Apple right away, so they fired me and gave someone else the job overnight. ![]() My pay was fair, but not enough to make dropping a couple grand feasible, that is if I was even given the option to begin with. They seemed real hungry for the deal to go through, as would anyone who owns a school I’d imagine… Long story short, I was fired out of nowhere because Apple demanded that a teacher of any logic class should be ‘Logic Pro certified,’ which, ofcourse requires attending a course and completing a series of tests that costs a couple thousand dollars to take. At some point, the higher ups at the school started talking endorsement deals with Apple. I was well liked by student body and staff alike, and anyone who went there and took my class would come out with a whole new world of ways to use Logic. I took pride in that job, cared for my student’s success and knew my topic of teaching inside and out. I was teaching at a production school (which will go unnamed for the sake of this post) where I taught music production using Logic pro, beginning through advanced. One example of a company pushing their customers in a very unfair way for the sake of aggressive marketing schemes is a story that happened to me some years back.
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