Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - I am a sophomore majoring in accounting, and I want to go abroad for a master's degree after graduation.

I am a sophomore majoring in accounting, and I want to go abroad for a master's degree after graduation.

Now that I have seen your post and the good answers from enthusiastic netizens, I will not "join in the fun".

Today, I saw your post on the Internet still hanging in the "Recommended Questions for Me", so as a retired professional studying abroad, here are some suggestions for your reference:

1, you belong to a working family, so you don't want to consider the United States. Don't position yourself like this yet! Because this conclusion is not necessarily true-the key depends on whether your goal of studying abroad is to find ways to develop abroad or to return to China for development. If you choose to expand abroad, go to an immigrant country, and European countries are not immigrant countries;

2, hope DIY, of course, I have helped countless students to complete DIY in the past-but be prepared: I need a good English foundation, and applying for graduate students is a complicated process-if you have such psychological preparation, it will be OK!

3. Let's analyze some specific situations:

1), if you studied English before, it will be difficult to learn a foreign language in order to study abroad. Many of my students went to Italy before, but most of them were divided into "migrant workers" and "returnees", which failed. So this road is a very bumpy and dangerous road;

2), my own niece, was high flyers from the German Department of Shanghai International Studies University before she went abroad to study PhD. I went to Heidelberg to study PhD three years ago. After finishing my studies in mid-February, I visited Europe and returned to China for employment on March 8-because Germany is not an immigrant country.

3) The overall cost of studying in the UK is twice that of an American university-that is, the cost of studying in the UK for one year can be spent in the US for two years. This is not the main thing, the main thing is: studying for a master's degree in Britain, the day when I finish my studies is the time to return to China;

4) It is difficult to apply for graduate students in Canada. Generally speaking, it is not recommended to apply for Canada below 3.4.

5) Applying for a business school mainly depends on whether it is AACSB business school-at present, there are only three business schools in China, namely Tsinghua Business School, Fudan Business School and China Europe Business School. Even Shanghai University of Finance is not AACSB. There are more than 300 AACSBs in the United States, so as long as you are accepted by any one of them, you are already higher than most business schools in China. And your GPA application to American universities is absolutely no problem;

6) If the family's economic conditions are not very good, it can be like Liu Tongxue the year before last. I designed a very cheap school for her, about 350 thousand every two years-of course, the premise should be a business school with AACSB certification;

7) If you graduated from AACSB Business School in the United States and studied hard to get CPA, you don't need to find a job yourself, but come back to work for you!

In the final analysis, to get back to your goal, everything is empty talk without "goal", right?

Well, that's all for your reference. Good luck and welcome to keep asking questions.