1, vocational skills training (welfare): Vocational high schools pay attention to vocational skills training, and students can systematically learn one or more practical professional skills to lay a solid foundation for future employment or further study.
2. Access to higher education (advantages): Vocational high school students can continue their studies through vocational college entrance examination and counterpart entrance examination. Although the competition is not as fierce as the general college entrance examination, it still provides opportunities for further study.
3. Direct employment (profit): Vocational high school graduates are more likely to find jobs corresponding to their majors after graduation, and having a skill is conducive to faster integration into the labor market.
4. Learning atmosphere (disadvantage): The learning atmosphere of vocational high schools may not be as strong as that of ordinary high schools, and there may be differences in the quality of students and autonomous learning ability in some vocational high schools, which requires students to have stronger self-drive.
5. Choice of further education (disadvantage): Although vocational high school graduates can also take the entrance examination, compared with ordinary high schools, the scope of choosing universities may be limited, especially the chances of entering first-class universities are relatively few.
6. Degree recognition (disadvantage): The social recognition of vocational high school education may not be as good as that of ordinary high schools or undergraduate courses in some fields or levels, which may affect some career promotion opportunities and development prospects in the future.