- Sep 4, 2001
- 5,675
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ive heard increasingly in recent years that fluency in chinese is becoming a more and more valuable quality to employers. this is in the SF bay area, by the way, regarding the high-tech industry mainly. seeing that I'm studying computer science and I come from a Chinese household, I was wondering if it would be worthwhile to take some classes in Chinese in college.
I grew up with my parents speaking chinese to me. I have no problem whatsoever understanding spoken Chinese, but I can't read it. While I can manage conversational Chinese without butchering pronunciation too much, I am far from fluent in speaking the language. I therefore already have a fairly good foundation for learning chinese and have parents to practice with.
Is it worthwhile to develop my skills in the language? Is it helpful in the job market?
I grew up with my parents speaking chinese to me. I have no problem whatsoever understanding spoken Chinese, but I can't read it. While I can manage conversational Chinese without butchering pronunciation too much, I am far from fluent in speaking the language. I therefore already have a fairly good foundation for learning chinese and have parents to practice with.
Is it worthwhile to develop my skills in the language? Is it helpful in the job market?
