法国目前经济很差 全无生气 在欧洲也没有什么地位
m[=SCH-; ~}b0zL 只能向外国人发泄私愤 而非内寻原因 可比拟稀拉裤裆里说为什么工作都让中国人赚走了她可以对付中国 等等 放屁瞅别人 均为痞子行为
SOR\oZ7 nqH[
y0 其实法国人极其懒散 比如很多学生毕业也不想出社会工作 而是回到校园 继续读一科 猫着
7#C$}1XJ1 :Ob4WU http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7293992.stm ?-c|c_|$ vy~6]hH French students shy of real world S Q:H2vvD :0y-n.-{ >!1]G"U
R_G2C@y* 1K3XNHF Agnes Urhweiller describes France's education system as a "has been"
1SjVj9{: Between the two rounds of the French local elections, BBC correspondent Emma Jane Kirby is travelling around France, testing the temperature of voters.
:? B4q#]N *N$XQ{o In Montpellier, she is told that France's education system is completely out of sync with the world of business.
ynA_Z^j M%_*vD Montpellier is very much a young person's city. Students make up 30% of its population, and the pavement cafes are swarming with youngsters who are furiously scribbling in note books or dashing off the final lines of essays.
!f(A9V }K 'A/]' But despite the nationwide passion for education, surprisingly, not a single French university makes it into the world's top 40.
SlB`ktcfI P WS8Dpb France may be a global leader in high technology, but employers complain that today there are far too few students studying science and technology and there are far too many studying "soft subjects" which leaves them ill-prepared to join the real world of work.
liYsUmjZ= +>C2
6Q At Montpellier's Social Science faculty, I watched scores of undergraduates soak up a lecture on basic psychology.
Y[L,rc/j f.J^HQ_ I have studied so much, I am almost overqualified. And now I need a job to get money and I can't find one
|I1,9ex kKF=%J?X Aurelie
{BlTLAKm s7yKxg+`{ !y_L~81? Bordeaux resists Sarkozy
)>h3IR )*}\fmOv{ There are 65,000 psychology students in France - that is a quarter of the European total for that subject.
!7\dr ) 9QP= I asked a passing student what he wanted to do when he left university. "I want to be an eternal student, " he said. "Just learning for learning's sake."
h
:bx0:O" s;P _LaIp) 'Rigid system'
}BS
EK<W H%m^8yW1 A noble sentiment perhaps, but an impractical one in 21st Century France where unemployment has been doggedly high for the past 20 years.
X$==J St {P?Ge In France, many young people don't study the right subjects
Fw[1Aa# 6?}|@y^fb Agnes Urhweiller
,2!7iX Montpellier careers office
(zsmJe 9HR1m3 The national unemployment rate may have recently fallen to just under 8%, but in Montpellier it stands at 11.3%.
;s,1/ kA EUt2S_2P At the local careers office, counsellor Agnes Urhweiller told me she worried that the French education system was completely out of sync with the world of business.
w@2NXcmw Uot(3p!S6 Ms Urhweiller regularly sees hundreds of students who are well qualified but who have no real skills to offer employers.
\68bXY. NblPVxS "In France, many young people don't study the right subjects," she said as she marked a skills test for a young job seeker.
uD{-a$6z ;PMPXN'z6 "I advise them they need practical qualifications to work. I come from the private sector and I know that private businesses need young people and, of course, that is where the money is, too. But our education system is a 'has been' - it's too rigid," Ms Urhweiller said.
x3'ANw6E 2Ax(q&`9 Baffled
d
KPXs-5 "8a
V~]~Dj
U!+O+( hFoe
VM[h }6LcimQyK ZWyf.VJ A recent survey showed that 75% of graduates want to work in the public sector because civil servants and teachers enjoy a high level of social protection.
]
gHr
qi% ~Fvz&dO 3U?gw!M> "=]'"'B: But President Nicolas Sarkozy's plans to slash thousands of civil servant posts, and a recent economic report commissioned by the government has warned that people must accept the future is not with the state, but with private industry.
0KExB{ K )]Zdaw)X Among the youngsters I met searching for jobs at the careers office was 23-year-old Aurelie. She is still baffled as to what she wants to do.
w@WtW8
p^ w`boQ_Ir "I have studied so much, I am almost overqualified. And now I need a job to get money and I can't find one," she said.
%m lH w@P86'< v "Everyone tells you to get a good education but my parents studied much less than I did and yet they didn't have such problems finding work."
oSY
JXs 71(ppsHk 'Born into uncertainty'
uUaDesz~= ax _v+v % Marc Willinger, an economist at Montpellier University, believes young people today live in a more precarious world than their parents did.
1|
WDbk D {E,XOi Not only is finding permanent work more difficult, but - with the state coffers empty - their retirement will not be cushioned by the government hand outs their parents will enjoy.
0RdW.rZJ )sIzBC This generation is having to fend for itself like never before.
{nZP4jze zwUZ*Se "The young generation has been born into uncertainty," Mr Willinger said.
4%v-)HGh /FTP8XHwL) "And they have to live with that every day - not just because of unemployment but also because they have a much higher burden than the previous generation. They will have to care for themselves, for their children and they'll also have to care for their parents' generation."
\K2S.j I&8!V)r) 'Only a waitress'
toG- Dz&