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Chinese American liberal arts students were forced to change careers when they were embarrassed to find a job.

News from China Overseas Chinese Network: According to Ming Pao, the embarrassment faced by China liberal arts students in the workplace is becoming more and more obvious. It is difficult to find a job and the salary is low. Many people resolutely change careers after graduation for a year or two, and even go back to school to study for a degree in science and engineering, starting from a field that has been struggling for many years to a completely unfamiliar field.

Miss Zhang, originally from Anhui, studied English at Renmin University of China before going abroad and went to the United States to study for a master's degree in communication. After graduation, she worked in a China company in new york, but she was not satisfied with the job because of the pressure and salary. After working for 1 year, she finally resigned and returned to the school where she graduated to study for a master's degree in statistics, making a new plan for her life. However, only she knows the pain of this change. Miss Zhang has been studying liberal arts and is completely unfamiliar with science and engineering courses. In order to finish her homework, she studies late into the night every day.

Ma Ming, who graduated from the Chinese Department in China, came to the United States to study for an MBA, but he couldn't find a corresponding job, so he had to be an auto insurance broker. Because of poor business development, he joined the ranks of real estate agents and diversified his business in order to survive, and his favorite literature and history books have long been dusty.

Although it is difficult for science and engineering graduates to find satisfactory jobs at present, they are still much better than liberal arts students, which is also the main motivation for liberal arts students to change careers. In China, it is much less for a person to change careers after finishing school. Such a cross-industry is a great challenge. In order to survive, these China students are faced with the helpless choice of changing careers. Fortunately, they can engage in their favorite occupations and stimulate their enthusiasm for work. Those who are not so lucky must bend over and suffer hardships in unfamiliar areas, which is also the price that the first generation of immigrants are forced to pay in a brand-new cultural and social environment.