What is the prospect of the Master of Chinese International Education in Zhejiang University?
Xdjm international Chinese major student = = = = = = = = = = = = I am an undergraduate in teaching Chinese as a foreign language. The International Master of Chinese as a Foreign Language belongs to Yuquan College of International Education, and our undergraduate course is Xixi College of Media and International Culture. Its predecessor was the old Chinese Department of Zhejiang University before the merger of the four major universities, and it was mainly a teacher who studied literature and aesthetics. Therefore, there is basically no teacher who can teach linguistics and modern Chinese in our undergraduate major-there was one, but she had a whim to teach ancient Chinese a few years ago, so we have never had a serious professional course. I have to take the school bus to ZJG to attend Chinese department classes every day, but I haven't listened to many classes in total. After graduation, all the students in our class stopped doing this major. According to the statistics of our college in 2007, teaching Chinese as a foreign language is one of the majors with the lowest employment rate, if not the highest. Master: We have a senior who is going to change careers after graduation. Moreover, the master's degree in teaching Chinese as a foreign language in Zhejiang University was approved only this year, and the conditions are not very mature ~ ~ In fact, I think the way out for the schools of teaching Chinese as a foreign language in Zhejiang University and Peking University seems vague. A senior student of Beijing dialect also said that it is difficult for people who study Chinese as a foreign language in her school to come out to do counterpart work or continue to study for a doctorate. If there is a good opportunity, the school teachers will leave first, so how can they treat you? Anyway, I think the current Chinese craze is the result of Hanban hype, and the future is ... er ... it's really hard to say ~