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How to find a part-time job when studying in Japan?

The teacher studying abroad in Tiandao helps you find a part-time job in Japan-the way to find a job in Japan.

1. town/ job

This kind of magazine will be provided free of charge in the larger subway in Japan and even in some convenience stores. The magazine is mainly aimed at part-time recruitment in this region, and its classification is more comprehensive. Therefore, students can contact and choose jobs that suit them by reading magazines, thus solving the problem of money.

Send club

If the language ability is not up to standard, you can try to contact the dispatch agency in Japan. Sending clubs-as the name implies, sending part-time workers to companies that need labor everywhere. Generally speaking, they do more manual work for factories, without paying special attention to language skills. There is no such thing as a free lunch, so the sending society draws corresponding remuneration from it, such as 10- 30% of the hourly wage of workers.

3. Head of the store

Some small and medium-sized enterprises (especially restaurants and izakaya) will post the recruitment information directly on the facade of the store when they are short of staff, so when going shopping for a walk, they must pay more attention to the information of the store, and occasionally there will be unexpected gains, which is also very likely.

How to find a part-time job in Japan-some Japanese companies and jobs that like to recruit international students very much.

1. Convenience Store (7- 1 1, family mark, Lawson)

The work of convenience stores is relatively easy, which requires a certain language ability, not only a simple checkout dialogue language, but also to respond to customers' needs at any time.

2. Catering industry (Matsuya, Yoshinoya, Rigaowu)

These are very representative diets for the general public in Japan, and they are very popular in Japan, because their consumption is not very high and the demand for part-time jobs is huge. They are suitable for male students and can generally be used as kitchens (it's hard, but it doesn't involve language, and the method is simple, and most of them are utensils).

3. Factory

This is the job that most foreign students started. They follow the flow of the machine and don't need the ability of the Japanese. It's hard, and the hourly wage is not particularly high (such as lunch factory, fish factory, vegetable factory).