GMAT考试写作指导:Issue写作范文十九-查字典英语网
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GMAT考试写作指导:Issue写作范文十九

发布时间:2016-03-02  编辑:查字典英语网小编

  19. Sample Essay 1:

  Whether an employer should emphasize specialization in business courses or a

  more varied academic preparation is a controversial one. On the one hand, the

  increasing diversification of business activities requires employees to have specialized

  knowledge. On the other hand, the capricious nature of the market needs employees to

  have a more varied academic preparation so that he could handle unexpected situations.

  However, in the final analysis, I believe that an employer should emphasize specialized

  knowledge in business courses.

  One reason for my belief is that there are special requirements for each position of

  a company and only those who have adequate knowledge for the position can take the

  position. If everyone does his job well, the whole company will prosper.

  Another reason for my belief lies in the fact that entry-level employees do not

  need a varied academic preparation, for they do not have to handle complicated

  situations. Unlike those of a senior staff member, their responsibilities are clearly

  defined in the job description.

  Perhaps the best reason for my belief is that ones energy is limited. If the

  employer expects their employees to have a more varied academic preparation, college

  graduates will spend less time on their own special field of study. As a result, they may

  not have adequate special knowledge for their future positions.

  For the reasons above I therefore believe that an employer should emphasize

  specialization in business courses in the application process. Although general

  knowledge is also important in many respects, a specialist is more useful for a company.

  Sample Essay 2:

  In recruiting for entry-level jobs, should employers stress a broad liberal arts

  education, a technical business background, or should employers favor neither one over

  the other? In my view, while the ideal job candidate has significant academic experience

  in both realms, whether employers should favor one type of background over the other

  depends on the nature of the particular job and the anticipated length of employment.

  First, a strong business background is more critical for some entry-level jobs than

  for others. Fledgling accountants, financial analysts, and loan officers cannot perform

  optimally without a solid academic background in accounting, finance, and banking.

  Even in sales of financial products and services, new employees need extensive

  technical knowledge to educate the customer and to be effective salespeople. However,

  in other entry-level positions―such as personnel, advertising and marketing―technical

  business knowledge may not be as critical as a broad experience with various types of

  people and an enlightened view of different cultures.

  Second, the employers hiring decision should also depend on the anticipated

  length of employment. In recruiting short-term workers, especially for positions that are

  labor intensive and where judgment and experience are not of paramount importance,

  the applicant who is strongly business-oriented may be the better choice. On the job,

  this applicant will probably be more pragmatic, and spend less time pondering the job

  and more time doing it. However, an employer looking for a long-term employee may

  be better served by hiring an applicant with a strong liberal arts background. By way of

  their more general education, these applicants have acquired a variety of general,

  transferable skills. They may be more adept than their colleagues with business-only

  backgrounds at recognizing and solving management problems, dealing with business

  associates from different cultures, and viewing-issues from a variety of perspectives. All

  of these skills contribute to a persons lifelong ability to adapt to and even anticipate

  changes that affect the company, and to move easily into new positions as such changes

  demand.

  In sum, recruiters for entry-level jobs should avoid preferring one type of

  applicant over another in all cases. Instead, recruiters should consider the immediate

  technical demands of the job as well as the prospect of advancement and long-term

  employment within the company.

  

  

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