If you wanted to be bold, you could contact them, by phone or email or whatever, and ask them to level with you, and let you know what specifically made them feel you weren't a "hard worker", and reassure them that you're worth their time as well. Of course, you'll probably want to be a bit diplomatic about it.
If nothing else, it would show a commitment, and strong interest in the position... which might help relieve their worries.
I already did that. That is why I know that I was actually rejected. I called my interviewer while she was on holiday,
knowing full well she was on holiday, and asked about things.
Apparently after a lot of mumbo-jumbo it turned out that she couldn't
find 7/9 of the results of the task she had asked me to do and hadn't bothered to ask about them during the interview, which may have actually been the sole reason I wasn't hired. I put them in the spreadsheet. Right under where she had put her demonstration, as I thought was a perfectly expected and sensible thing to do.
Eh?
Anyway, she said she felt "very positive" and would talk to folks again.
If you wanted to be bold, you could contact them, by phone or email or whatever, and ask them to level with you, and let you know what specifically made them feel you weren't a "hard worker", and reassure them that you're worth their time as well. Of course, you'll probably want to be a bit diplomatic about it.
If nothing else, it would show a commitment, and strong interest in the position... which might help relieve their worries.
I've heard many times that this is a good idea, with the emphasis being that you want to know where you need to focus on improving.
It's in four different fields, though, LOL. Russian poetry translation, pure mathematics, teaching/curriculum development, and comparative literature. SHE'S TOO TALENTED
Considering asking my old programming professor for a reference. I did really well in his class.