Job Recruitment Website - Job seeking and recruitment - I'm a freshman majoring in Japanese. I've just studied Japanese for almost a semester, and suddenly I feel that Japanese competition is fierce now, and I'm still a junior college student.

I'm a freshman majoring in Japanese. I've just studied Japanese for almost a semester, and suddenly I feel that Japanese competition is fierce now, and I'm still a junior college student.

Hello, fellow villager! I am from Shijiazhuang, and I also study Japanese, but it is 10 years earlier than you, hehe.

After reading your question, let me talk about my opinion:

1, I wonder if I need to take this?

If possible, I suggest you have a look. In China, diploma is overemphasized and ability is neglected, especially in the north.

2. If you are a junior college student, as long as you have passed the Japanese level, will enterprises pay more attention to ability than education when looking for a job?

Sub-enterprise level 1 No need to take the exam, but it doesn't hurt. I haven't taken the exam so far, not once, but I'm also a translator, mainly on my own.

As I said above, I hope you will think about it. Diploma is just a stepping stone, but it is indispensable (big companies attach importance to this, especially those who don't know Japanese, and interviews are all about diplomas and certificates).

North attaches great importance to diplomas and relationships; The South emphasizes ability and personal potential (personal understanding).

3. Which is more suitable for today's society, Japanese plus computer or Japanese plus accounting?

Each has its own advantages. I have more contact with finance and the treatment is quite good. If you are an IT major, you should study software programming and database management.

4. What major is better if you take this course? Because according to the English teacher, Japanese students study English as an undergraduate, and their abilities vary greatly after graduation. For English, they are very confused ~ ~ ~ I am even more nervous now when I see my ancestors' answers about employment in 2009. The school where I work is not a very good school, but a junior college. I don't want to have no advantage in society after graduation, otherwise I can't stand on my feet.

Remember to master 1-2, this is your foothold. No matter what your major is, not finding a good job is not necessarily a matter of ability, and sometimes luck is also crucial. English and Japanese have their own advantages. Think about what kind of relationship you have and what major you study, and then someone will help you. Think about your career plan.

If you study Japanese, the northern cities: Beijing, Tianjin, Dalian and Qingdao.

If you study Japanese, the southern cities: Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Dongguan and Shanghai.

English should be in demand in every city because it is an international language.

Finally, I give you a suggestion: Japanese or English is just a language, not a technology. I hope you can apply for relevant positions in large enterprises in language, and you must switch to management and marketing for several years after you enter. After you have a certain foundation, you will become a compound talent.