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Pest Control Worker

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AVG. SALARY

$38,820

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EDUCATION

High school (GED) +

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JOB OUTLOOK

Stable

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

You're a pest control worker. You're in the office after spending much of your day on various jobs around town. At one house you were spraying some fruit trees against pests. And at another, you were advising a client on how to reduce the neighborhood mosquito population.

The phone rings. It's a man who says he's got a termite infestation and wants your advice on what to do about it. Before you can give any kind of useful information, you need to know what kind of termites they are.

You pull out one of your insect identification manuals and turn to the section on termites. There are two kinds -- the drywood termite and the subterranean termite. This is what your manual says:

Drywood Termite

Appearance: Larger than subterranean termites, up to one-half inch long; no worker caste in the colony.

Habits: Create colonies in wood, with no connection to the ground necessary; often found in attic wood; need very little moisture.

Diet: Wood and occasionally other cellulose material.

Details: Cause serious damage to structures, often long before they are discovered; piles of sawdust-like pellets are a distinct sign of infestation; not as widespread as subterranean termite; colonies may contain up to 2,700 members.

Subterranean Termite

Appearance: There are four types of species, or "castes," in a subterranean termite colony:

Worker: approximately one-quarter of an inch long, light colored, wingless.

Soldier: elongated head with mandibles.

Supplementary Reproductives: wingless or very short, non-functional wings, light colored.

Primary Reproductives: winged, and darker than other members, caste most often seen.

Habits: Live in colonies underground, from which they build tunnels in search of food; able to reach food above the level of the ground by building mud tubes; dependent on moisture for survival.

Diet: Wood and other cellulose material.

Details: Colonies can contain up to one million members.

You need to ask the customer some questions in order to determine what kind of termites they are. Write out five questions that will help you figure out what species it is based on the above descriptions.

Now think of another way to ask every question based on the information in your manual. For example, you could ask, "How many termites were there?" Or, you could ask, "Did it look like there were only a few thousand termites, or closer to a million?"