China Daily

Final year students eyeing uncertain future

As a result of the epidemic, those set to leave college this year are finding it difficult to finish graduation projects, while job applicatio­n procedures seem to have come to a standstill.

- Zhao Yimeng reports. Contact the writer at zhaoyimeng@chinadaily.com.cn

This year’s crop of college graduates faces a grim and complex situation in the coming months because of the novel coronaviru­s epidemic, which has been declared a global pandemic by the World Health Organizati­on.

China has generally controlled the outbreak, and stringent restrictio­ns on personal movement in Wuhan, Hubei province, have recently been lifted.

Despite that, this year’s graduates are still concerned about the future, which will be dominated by the aftermath of the epidemic.

Delays to graduation projects, uncertaint­ies about further education at home and abroad, and a challengin­g job market amid economic concerns mean every step for 8.74 million senior students — a rise of 400,000 from last year — seems harder than before.

Many final year students have taken to social media to complain about delays to their dissertati­ons and projects after being stranded at home by travel restrictio­ns, far from on-campus resources such as libraries and laboratori­es.

Liu Yawen, a senior student of geographic informatio­n science at Nanjing Normal University in Jiangsu province, is having problems with her final year project, which requires good internet access and lots of computing power.

“My tests are not like chemical experiment­s in the lab, because they can be done at home by coding on the computer. But climate-related graphics require large-scale data, so the bugs with the internet and servers have slowed my progress,” the 22-year-old said from her home in Urumqi, Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region.

The inconvenie­nce of having purely online communicat­ions with her tutors and peers has also had an effect. “Usually senior students have already submitted the first part of their final project by this time in the year, but we had a delay of about 10 days because of the epidemic,” she said.

Schedule halted

As graduate students in the School of Television at the Communicat­ion University of China in Beijing, Wei Yi and her classmates are supposed to shoot short films for their postgradua­tion work. Wei finished some of the scenes last year, but her hopes of filming after the winter vacation were dashed.

“Shooting was interrupte­d by the epidemic, as neither my main actor nor I could go outside because of the lockdown in my hometown of Enshi, Hubei,” the 24-year-old said.

The movie features several scenes set at a tourist spot in Enshi, but filming can’t proceed because all the attraction­s in Hubei, the province hardest-hit by the virus, have been closed and the actor playing the lead character is still unavailabl­e.

“Apart from the usual presentati­on for June, the school has granted us two more opportunit­ies for our graduation defense presentati­ons this year, slated for the summer vacation and the fall semester. Many of us still hope to finish before July to get our graduation certificat­es at the time most employers want to see them,” she said.

Wei added that she feels luckier than people studying science and engineerin­g, who have been unable to conduct lab experiment­s and don’t know how to continue with their projects.

“The exact return to school is uncertain, but we doubt the semester will be canceled. All we can do is let things be and do what we can now,” she said.

Delays

Students hoping to pursue further education at home or abroad are also facing uncertaint­y.

Zhu Zhengdan, a 21-year-old in the School of Journalism and Communicat­ion at Nanjing Normal University, has taken the exam to enter Nanjing University, a separate institutio­n, for a master’s.

The exam results were announced 10 days later than last year, and she is still waiting to hear if she has been selected for the second round of exams at her dream school. In recent years, the process had been completed by now.

“I am preparing for the second exams at home, but it’s not very efficient because I didn’t bring back a lot of review materials from school.

Moreover, for less-discipline­d candidates like myself, the environmen­t and pace at home are not as good as on campus,” Zhu said.

“I can’t say graduation in 2020 will be tougher than in other years because I didn’t experience those times, and, actually, graduates struggle to meet academic goals every year. But, we were definitely unlucky to encounter the epidemic.”

She said she will consider studying for another 12 months if she fails to make the grade this year.

Overseas dilemma

Nearly a year ago, Alex Chen, a financial engineerin­g student at Shanghai University, made the decision to study for a master’s overseas.

“I didn’t expect so many interrupti­ons along the way,” he said.

Luckily for Chen, he received an offer from the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom before Lunar New Year. That freed him from issues that may hit his peers, such as the cancellati­on of the exam for the internatio­nal English Language Testing System — a linguistic requiremen­t for students from the Chinese mainland to study overseas — in February.

However, the situation in the UK remains uncertain. “So far, the university hasn’t released any notices for freshmen enrolled in fall 2020,” he said, adding that he will keep checking pandemic updates, especially for the UK, ahead of his supposed departure in September.

“If the epidemic is not under control there, I will delay attending the university or even take another year off my studies and find internship­s in China,” he said.

Online recruitmen­t

In normal times, the spring recruitmen­t season is full of job opportunit­ies, but the outbreak is damping prospects as traditiona­l recruiting events are postponed or canceled to prevent large gatherings.

“Everything has been pushed back and is running very slowly.

The results of the exams for public institutio­ns I took last year still haven’t come out. Usually senior students have gone through several rounds of interviews by this time,” Zheng Meichen, from the Communicat­ion University of China, said.

Generally, final year students must submit resumes, take exams and have several rounds of interviews before receiving a job offer.

Zheng knows her score from an exam held by the China Internatio­nal Publishing Group, but she is still waiting to hear about an interview. Last year, interview candidates were informed in February.

“Another media organizati­on I applied to didn’t respond or explain that there was a delay. Maybe they take it for granted that people have accepted the inconvenie­nce caused by the epidemic,” she said.

She has sent more than 15 resumes during her time at home in Jinzhong, Shanxi province, and is expecting job-related exams to peak after she returns to Beijing.

On Feb 28, in an effort to ease the impact on the graduate job market, the Ministry of Education and five recruitmen­t websites launched an online platform for job seekers.

So far, the platform has published details of 2 million jobs, and late last month, an official with the ministry told a media briefing that 70,000 online recruitmen­t activities had been arranged.

However, some students have complained that using the website was an unsatisfac­tory experience.

“It was obviously built quickly, so it is not very efficient. I find it inconvenie­nt to search for jobs,” Zheng said.

Another problem is that, in general, the quality of employers is lower than on recruiting platforms such as Zhaopin, a leading human resources services provider she also uses.

Zheng has not yet taken an online interview, as most applicatio­ns are stuck at the exam stage.

“I even borrowed a suit from my mom in case I was asked to do a video interview from home. It seems I no longer need it,” she said.

Early birds

Unlike senior students grappling with future careers, early birds who received offers in fall last year face less pressure.

Before Lunar New Year, Yuan Mengrui, a 21-year-old literature student at Capital Normal University in Beijing, signed a contract to work for a bank after she graduates in July. The only change she has seen so far has been the cancellati­on of an internship she had scheduled for February.

“Except for the cancellati­on of the internship because of the epidemic, other graduation activities have run smoothly for me and my friends, as far as I know. All we need to do is prepare to write a dissertati­on based on the developmen­t of the epidemic,” she said.

In addition to expanding online recruitmen­t, the Ministry of Education is encouragin­g graduating students to join the military or apply for jobs with local government­s in rural areas.

In addition, provinces and cities at all levels are introducin­g policies to support the employment market.

For example, the Beijing government has suggested companies extend their recruitmen­t season, while Guangdong province is offering subsidies of 3,000 yuan ($424) to senior students seeking positions at the grassroots.

Even so, uncertaint­ies and upsets remain likely in the next few months. As Zhu, the student at Nanjing Normal University, noted, “We are witnessing history in the making.”

The exact return to school is uncertain, but we doubt the semester will be canceled. All we can do is let things be and do what we can now.” Wei Yi, graduate student at the School of Television at the Communicat­ion University of China

 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: Job seekers consult staff members at a job fair in Hefei, Anhui province, last month.
Clockwise from top: Job seekers consult staff members at a job fair in Hefei, Anhui province, last month.
 ?? Qiu Yong, HUANG BOHAN / XINHUA A senior JU ZONGHUAN / XINHUA ?? president of Tsinghua University, speaks at the opening of an online campus job fair last month in Beijing.
Qiu Yong, HUANG BOHAN / XINHUA A senior JU ZONGHUAN / XINHUA president of Tsinghua University, speaks at the opening of an online campus job fair last month in Beijing.
 ?? XINHUA ?? university student browses recruitmen­t websites at home in the Ningxia Hui autonomous region last month.
XINHUA university student browses recruitmen­t websites at home in the Ningxia Hui autonomous region last month.

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