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How to enrich internship experience by studying abroad

The number of returnees is increasing, and only a report card and a degree certificate can not help returnees find a good job easily. A substantial resume is playing an increasingly important role in the application of returnees, and a substantial resume is inseparable from a weighty and convincing internship experience. LAM Raymond, whose resume is too "simple" and who has been repeatedly refused to return to China after studying in the United States, recently participated in many job fairs, but each time ended in failure. The main reason is the lack of foreign internship and work experience. Xiaolin submitted nearly 100 resumes, but most of them were rejected. He also said frankly: "Now enterprises no longer only value grades and academic qualifications, and returnees without practical experience are no longer the first choice for enterprises." Some returnees only have the most basic information on their resumes, such as name, address, grades, school they attended, etc., but there are few internship experiences and work experiences that can prove their work ability, which is most obvious in recent returnees. According to the survey data, 70% of overseas college graduates who have successfully found jobs within half a year after returning to China have worked before studying abroad or had professional-related internship experience during their study abroad. Why is there so little internship experience and poor time management? Many people will do odd jobs in some restaurants, cafes and bars to make a living while studying abroad. The reasons can be divided into two categories: first, the family's economic conditions are limited, and it is necessary to do odd jobs to subsidize the living expenses; Second, the vision is not long enough and there is no sense of career planning. I only see the immediate opportunities for odd jobs to make money, ignoring the long-term interests. These jobs have nothing to do with their major. They only need simple labor, but they will take up a lot of time and cannot play the role of cultivating the ability needed for future employment. It is also one of the bane to blindly follow the trend of going abroad if the goal is unclear. There is no clear career goal before going abroad, and there is no accurate orientation for the future employment direction after returning home. I just feel that there are many people studying abroad around me, and there are not a few who decide to go abroad in a hurry. Because there is no long-term employment goal, even if there is an internship opportunity, it is often missed because of insensitivity. Cui Bo, a returnee from Stendhal University, pointed out that international students in China tend to "get together" when they go abroad, and tend to contact only China students and have less interaction with local students. In addition, I don't often participate in the school's club activities, which leads to information occlusion and misses many internship opportunities. How to enrich internship experience Several returnees who have successfully found jobs within six months after returning to China shared their practice of finding internship opportunities and accumulating internship experience during their study abroad. Jiang Hua, who came back from studying in Britain, said, "As long as international students have completed enough credits, the school will allow us to find internship jobs in the rest of the time. It is better for foreign students to live in the school, so that they can have more interaction with local students and share internship information with them. Some students will also introduce foreign students to the staff of local companies, and then find opportunities to communicate privately. If there is an intern recruitment, international students can also prepare for the interview in advance. My initial internship opportunity was learned through exchanges with local students. " Sun Ming, who returned from studying in Japan, also suggested that "quasi-returnees" who are preparing to return to China for employment should pay attention to reasonable arrangement of time. Although the price in Japan is very high, his time for odd jobs is limited. He has given up odd jobs when his credits are about to meet the graduation requirements and concentrated on finding internship opportunities for people with professional counterparts.