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Semiconductor Processing Technician

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Math

You are a semiconductor technician working for a company that makes microchips. You work in a semiconductor fabrication facility, or "fab." Your official job title is equipment technician.

Your job is a little different from most of the other technicians who work at the fab. For one thing, you do not work in the area where the microchips are produced. Instead, you work in an advanced research laboratory.

Your job is to test equipment after engineers have experimented with its design. You want to see if the changes they have made are workable.

You are constantly troubleshooting: testing all the parts of the equipment for possible malfunctions, performing maintenance, fixing the equipment when necessary and reporting your findings to the engineers.

While the production area has always operated on a 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week schedule, the research lab where you work has only been open from Monday to Friday. However, the company has recently announced that they also want the lab to run on a full-time schedule.

Your supervisor approaches you and wants to know if you would be willing to work on weekends.

It sounds like a good deal. In the first place, the company is offering a $1,500 "bonus" for everyone who agrees to work weekends. Second, the hours that you work are reduced.

In addition to putting in a 12-hour shift on both Saturday and Sunday, you are required to work one other eight-hour shift sometime during the month. For this, you will get paid the equivalent of a regular 37.5-hour week.

Finally, you will receive shift premiums: 10 percent on Saturday and 15 percent on Sunday.

It sounds tempting. But before you give up your weekends, you want to calculate exactly how much more money you will be making. Also, you want to figure out the total percentage by which your hours are reduced.

Your current salary is $4,500 per month or $1,125 per week.