Answers:
Yes, you should apply for jobs in the field that you are studying. From my experience of 15 years working with students, I have found that it is disastrous at job interviews to simply say "I have no experience". The fact can be dressed up in words like, "That's why I am applying for this post. I want to put my academic and theoretical experience to work and test whether I am getting the right messages from university. At the same time, I can bring the latest academic and theoretical knowledge to the company. I believe I can merge the two and that that will benefit you more than someone who has experience and will simply repeat what he or she has done in the past for other companies. How do you know that the experience has any value?"
Next, I have also found that recruitment agencies can be a good place to start your job search. Visit them. Talk positively as in the above example to show you are a self-starter, a go-getter, enthusiastic, etc. After a bit of agency work you will have experience and you can then apply for better paid jobs.
Definitely, go for it and I wish you Good luck
Good on you - a student who pays their way ... and you cant get any experience without getting a job in the first place..
I hope you is studying English, he said in a tongue-in-cheek fashion, asking if she would spot the deliberate mistake?
Depends on what you are studying. Politics and sociology not much chance.
It depends on what you are studying. I would imagine that you can get a job that is linked to the course which you are studying in some way (eg for nursing you cold work as a carer in a residential/nursing home, in home care or in a hospital).
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