1, commercial type: working in an enterprise, commonly known as white-collar workers.
2. Education: Working in a school as a Japanese teacher or counselor.
3. Organ type: civil servant, working in the national diplomatic or foreign affairs department.
4. Stay in appearance: stay in Japan for employment.
As for which way out is better, I'm afraid it varies from person to person.
If you don't want to continue studying or doing research and are determined to be a social person, then choose 1. In this case, you can graduate directly to find a job without taking the postgraduate entrance examination. First of all, you wasted your youth and money. Second, general enterprises recruit foreign language personnel and are unwilling to have graduate students. If you have been abroad at the undergraduate stage, so much the better. Generally speaking, Japanese graduates from foreign universities have no worries about finding jobs, as long as your strength is not too bad. Of course, if you don't want to be a small clerk, but want to enter the management of a big company, then you can choose a cross-professional postgraduate entrance examination, and you must choose a major that can really learn skills.
If you choose to be a university teacher, then you must take the postgraduate entrance examination, because the academic qualifications of university teachers are very demanding now. If you are a university counselor, I also suggest that you take the postgraduate entrance examination, because counselors do not require a master's degree, but they are also selected on the basis of merit. If you are a middle school or high school teacher, there is no need to take the postgraduate entrance examination.
If you choose to be a civil servant, I suggest you take the postgraduate entrance examination. Because graduate students are one level higher than undergraduates after entering state organs, their promotion speed may be faster. Civil servants who specialize in Japanese are basically good positions. Take the Ministry of Foreign Affairs as an example. The Ministry recruits Japanese students every year, but the competition is fierce, which can be described as a crowded wooden bridge.
If you want to stay in Japan, you can go abroad for undergraduate studies, or you can go directly to Japan for postgraduate studies. Students in Japanese College of Daiwai University can choose 2+2,3+1to study and enroll students from Japanese universities irregularly. If China students stay and work in Japan, most of them are Japanese university teachers. Then you'd better study in Japan. Generally speaking, the application and examination are not too difficult, because you have no language barrier. But cost is also a problem. Although scholarships can be used to make up for it, it is said that if some schools want to apply for full scholarships, their Japanese level must be higher than the prescribed score. As for the irregular enrollment of Japanese universities, it depends on your luck. It is not fixed which school enrolls students in the university in which year. For example, in the first half of this year, a school enrolled 15 international students in China, with free tuition fees and a monthly living allowance of126,000 yen (there are 5 places outside the university), which is very rare. At that time, it was only for junior students. Although the school is not first-class, the opportunity is very good. Because of the generous treatment, the threshold is extremely high. At the beginning, anyone with a Japanese score of 320 or above can register. Later, because the number of people who reached the standard exceeded the standard, they could only register if they mentioned more than 350 points. So if you want to go abroad, you must prepare for the Japanese Level 1 exam.