What to Read in University is a young college graduate's reflection on today's college life. For a prospective college student, this is a book without any reason to ignore. It is the best-selling guidance book for college students in China in recent years, and its catalogue is widely circulated on the Internet under the name of "18 pieces of advice for college students from the 25-year-old chairman". It's advice, but the whole book has no didactic color. The author is just a young man who just graduated from college. Based on my own personal experience in the process of study, postgraduate entrance examination, job hunting and work, this paper talks about how college students should study and make full use of their four years in college, so that readers can understand a lot in a relaxed reading experience. The author, Mr. Qin Biaoxi, failed to apply for Peking University Law School that year and was transferred to Central South University as a major in ideological and political education. However, such an unpopular graduate can do real estate planning, be an IT project manager and be the chairman of the company a few years after graduation. What is the reason for this success?
2. "Job hunting, from freshman year" (Qin Puxi)
After the publication of "What to Read in University", teacher Qin Biaoxi presented this new book for college students after five years of sharpening a sword: "Job hunting, from freshman year". Teacher Qin has always stressed that learning should not be too utilitarian. During college, we must pay attention to the cultivation of critical thinking, expressive ability and civic awareness. However, in the face of the cruel reality and the increasingly severe employment situation of college students, Mr. Qin put job hunting in the first place. This book is a dialogue between a young chairman and college students about career planning and employment, and about livelihood and dignity. Through this book, Mr. Qin tries to let college students plan their careers from the moment they enter school and shape their core competitiveness in a down-to-earth manner, instead of playing games when they apply for a job. It is not the ten minutes of the interview that determines the result of the job search, but the four years of the whole university. This book tells how college students exchange their four-year "accumulated wealth" for their "thin hair" when looking for a job after graduation. From the choice of life direction, the grasp of job hunting strategy and tactics, to the skills of writing resumes, and how girls or hepatitis B patients break through the employment discrimination of employers, they have all made detailed, in-depth and comprehensive explanations.