When the exam sprint is in progress
Postgraduate entrance examination has become the norm, and even many college graduates must do it.
If you don't go to graduate school to improve your academic qualifications, then the employment advantage you occupy in the job market will not be so obvious. Without obvious employment advantages, it will be more difficult to find employment, which is an obvious employment situation.
However, some college graduates do not notice that the inconsistency of bachelor's and master's majors may increase the difficulty of employment, which is worth paying attention to.
In fact, many people watch others take the postgraduate entrance examination, and they themselves also follow the postgraduate examination. It is believed that after the academic qualifications are improved, the employment problem can be more properly solved. But in fact, there are some graduate students who have inconsistent bachelor's and master's majors, but they can't find a satisfactory job after graduation, or even can't find a job.
Nowadays, the employment environment is relatively involuted, even if it is a post system and many other positions, the professional requirements have been changed to the same bachelor and master, if it is inconsistent, it may not even be able to pass the qualification examination. So how to get employed? This is not a joke, you can take a look at some job postings issued by employers, and you will have an understanding.
Therefore, if conditions permit, it is best not to take the postgraduate examination across majors, so that the subsequent career development path will be compressed and restricted. Originally, after graduating from graduate school, the employment direction became much smaller and went to work in more professional positions. After the cross-major graduate school entrance examination, you may take a detour.
For example, if you are majoring in computer science as an undergraduate, you choose to study in a liberal arts major such as business administration at the graduate level, and it is very difficult to shine in a computer major after graduation.
You make it difficult for others to believe your professional level, after all, you studied liberal arts in graduate school, which has nothing to do with computers, and you will not study the relevant knowledge of computer science in depth, nor will you study the horizontal or vertical development of a specific direction of computer.
It can only solve some problems in the work based on the surface computer professional knowledge, which is not enough for the highly technical jobs, and it is necessary to spend a little more money to recruit graduate students with the same bachelor's and master's degrees in computer science, which can solve problems efficiently and quickly, and time is money to a certain extent.
Of course, if you only plan to work in the private sector, it will not have a big impact. Many private companies are not interested in what you majored in undergraduate or graduate school. It's just that you can help it do its job well, complete it efficiently, and bring benefits to the company.
However, if you want to work in those employers with research nature, it is difficult to say, if you want to enter the university to work, the bachelor's and master's majors are inconsistent, and you don't even have the opportunity to take a written exam.
Professional matching has gradually become a basic requirement in the job market, after all, there are quite a lot of college graduates, and it is relatively easy for employers to find suitable candidates.
If you can find a better employee, why should you need an employee whose ability is uncertain? Or the above sentence, the employer will not have low requirements for interests, if there is no interest, you will be harmed by the interests, and the overall level will decline, which is not a reasonable situation, which employer can accept it?
All in all, in the postgraduate entrance examination stage, the bachelor's and master's majors should be the same as possible. Sometimes it's not necessarily wrong to follow the trend of graduate school entrance examinations, but when you follow others to graduate school entrance examinations, it is best to carefully consider whether the graduate students of your chosen major are consistent with your undergraduate major, or a similar major.
For example, if the undergraduate major is a mathematics major, and the graduate student chooses a computer major, there is no problem, it seems that the undergraduate and master's majors are inconsistent, but the computer major requires strong mathematical ability, to a certain extent, it belongs to the "counterpart major", I hope everyone pays attention to it, it is really not a trivial matter.