Drill of English for SNMPTN Pack 2
>> Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Among the most trained masters you'll find varying branches of educational training but few as applicable to the exchange of human ideas as English degrees. A B.A. in English is less vocationally focused than many undergrad degrees, and is instead concentrated on the English language in its written form. Course study includes writing and composition as well as American, English, and world literature interpretation and analysis.
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English degrees, especially in their undergrad form, are intended to be broad study objectives. These degrees are designed to provide students the opportunity not to excel in a singular profession, as many degrees are built, but rather to allow students to be well-versed enough in worldly studies that they are capable of many different kinds of professions.
English majors often use their degrees to launch a graduate school quest. These students go on to use their degrees in many different ways, from law school to medical school. While English may not be directly applicable to many of these facets at first glance, there is a great deal of communicative work held in the pursuit of such an award. Communication proves pivotal at both the student and professional level.
English degree holders find themselves in many different professions after graduation related to the field. The most notable are journalism, reporting, writing, editing, publishing and teaching. These careers require excellent communication skills in spoken and written language, often incorporating critical thinking, which is exactly the kind of concentrations found in the coursework that English majors complete.
Degrees in English can also lead to jobs in less obvious industries including advertising, marketing, and business roles. Here, English degree graduates use learned communication skills from college to launch campaigns and to achieve objectives. And for many English majors, the breadth extends to jobs in the spotlight like acting, and behind the scenes gigs like directing.
Through reading, analyzing, and interpreting different forms of literature, English students gain a broad range of critical thinking skills that can be applied to nearly any career.
English degrees also focus heavily on writing, utilizing creative skills for application. Quality writing is used in journalism and professional writing and editing jobs, but also applies to a broad spectrum of business-related professions including public relations, marketing, and development.
While sometimes dubbed a "useless" degree in terms of its application, the English Bachelor's degree is in actuality relevant to an expansive range of professional implementations. Perhaps one reason for such bad publicity is that the broad reaching degree is attractive to students that are undecided about their majors. Because the degree has little vocational focus, without a proactive career approach, students graduate with little guidance on how to use their new degrees. An English degree is quite useful for many career purposes but it is not a path that specifically prepares students for any particular one.
Download Drill of English for National State Universities Exam (SNMPTN)
Download Questions
Download Solutions
English degrees, especially in their undergrad form, are intended to be broad study objectives. These degrees are designed to provide students the opportunity not to excel in a singular profession, as many degrees are built, but rather to allow students to be well-versed enough in worldly studies that they are capable of many different kinds of professions.
English majors often use their degrees to launch a graduate school quest. These students go on to use their degrees in many different ways, from law school to medical school. While English may not be directly applicable to many of these facets at first glance, there is a great deal of communicative work held in the pursuit of such an award. Communication proves pivotal at both the student and professional level.
English degree holders find themselves in many different professions after graduation related to the field. The most notable are journalism, reporting, writing, editing, publishing and teaching. These careers require excellent communication skills in spoken and written language, often incorporating critical thinking, which is exactly the kind of concentrations found in the coursework that English majors complete.
Degrees in English can also lead to jobs in less obvious industries including advertising, marketing, and business roles. Here, English degree graduates use learned communication skills from college to launch campaigns and to achieve objectives. And for many English majors, the breadth extends to jobs in the spotlight like acting, and behind the scenes gigs like directing.
Through reading, analyzing, and interpreting different forms of literature, English students gain a broad range of critical thinking skills that can be applied to nearly any career.
English degrees also focus heavily on writing, utilizing creative skills for application. Quality writing is used in journalism and professional writing and editing jobs, but also applies to a broad spectrum of business-related professions including public relations, marketing, and development.
While sometimes dubbed a "useless" degree in terms of its application, the English Bachelor's degree is in actuality relevant to an expansive range of professional implementations. Perhaps one reason for such bad publicity is that the broad reaching degree is attractive to students that are undecided about their majors. Because the degree has little vocational focus, without a proactive career approach, students graduate with little guidance on how to use their new degrees. An English degree is quite useful for many career purposes but it is not a path that specifically prepares students for any particular one.
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