Job Recruitment Website - Zhaopincom - Students are trained to pretend to be ghosts in a haunted house and work overtime without pay. Why is university training so boring?

Students are trained to pretend to be ghosts in a haunted house and work overtime without pay. Why is university training so boring?

First of all, the places that recruit college students for practical training are not doing this kind of thing in the first year. They understand that most college students are relatively naive, naive, and have simple ideas. A newborn calf steps into dark gray. Although a newborn calf is not afraid of tigers, it does not understand some of the "hidden rules" of society and has not experienced failure, so it cannot learn from failure.

In this way, even if those training bases do not deliberately exploit college students, they will not treat you well for their own benefit. Secondly, the internship training of college students is like an intern. Interns are the most easily dominated people in the workplace. You have to do all the dirty work, whether it is your own job or not, because you are new. Come on, actually sometimes you don’t quite understand what you should do and what you shouldn’t do, but if you do it for others, those regular employees can push their own things to you in a big way. Not only can he get the salary of a full-time employee, but he can also get off work at normal times, but you not only do double the work, but when you finally get the salary, you still don't have your own share.

In fact, this is the case in many places. If you are an intern, you have to sign an internship contract. In this way, even if you have a lot of work, your salary is guaranteed. But if it is just practical training for college students during school, this There may not be a contract, so at the end of the day, the training center has a reason not to pay you a salary.

Well, now that there is such a case, I think that when everyone encounters this kind of situation in the future, they must implement all the conditions agreed upon to avoid others taking advantage of loopholes.