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I am a computer network technology major, and now I have come out as an intern, but I still know nothing. What should I learn in the six months of internship before I can practice?
First of all, you have a degree and a professional advantage. Many large and medium-sized network companies and software companies have become technical departments in all walks of life, and there is a great demand for IT talents such as network, software and information security. Baidu and Tencent even launched a "grabbing war" at one time. They recruit talents with technical positions, and the requirements for academic qualifications are generally junior college or above. You majored in network technology, and they really need "potential stocks" like you.

If you graduated this year, you must have learned a lot of theoretical knowledge in college, but you lack practical operation and real project experience. Of course, this is not a personal problem, but almost all the disadvantages of college education, so many fresh graduates are rejected. Therefore, more and more college students choose "furnace learning" to learn practical operation in training schools and increase project experience to meet the employment requirements of recruitment enterprises.

Different from academic education, training schools mainly teach the core technologies needed in the actual work of enterprises, and study in different directions for different positions, such as software development engineers, network engineers, network marketers and so on. And teach the skills and experience required for the corresponding positions to students as course content. Some institutions will also hire project managers of enterprises to teach and guide students to operate real projects. In just a few months, IT may be equivalent to 1-2 years of work experience. After learning some interview skills, you can enter the IT high-paying position with a resume full of project experience and a confident smile.

Finally, I want to tell you that efforts and gains are directly proportional. If you want to get an enviable job, you must study hard and constantly improve yourself. No company will refuse excellent employees.