Yeah of course, I studied Chinese for 6 months at the ANU under a B Asian Studies, though as santa said, you could study Chinese/Chinese history at pretty much any university. However, since ANU has the asian studies degree (and an asian studies faculty) I think that you'd be pretty safe in assuming that they would have a larger range of histories and other arts type subjects relevant to what you're interested in.N.U.G. said:hey guys,
if someone wanted to do a course to really learn about Chinese langgue, culture and maybe even history... can that be done at Uni? any advice?
Why did you transfer to a degrading Science degree?neo_o said:Yeah of course, I studied Chinese for 6 months at the ANU under a B Asian Studies, though as santa said, you could study Chinese/Chinese history at pretty much any university. However, since ANU has the asian studies degree (and an asian studies faculty) I think that you'd be pretty safe in assuming that they would have a larger range of histories and other arts type subjects relevant to what you're interested in.
At ANU Chinese in your first year is double weighted, which means that it's worth 12 credit points (or half a full load of 24) and is quite alot of work. If you're doing a combined degree, Chinese will be the only Asian Studies course that you'll be able to do in your first year.
If you've got any general questions about ANU I'd be happy to answer them for you
1) Science is awesomesantaslayer said:Why did you transfer to a degrading Science degree?
Asian Studies is very good at ANU!
It'd be a very nice complement to say, a commerce or engineering degree. (Which ANU has. I'm talking about the asian studies ANU offers, not a general arts degree.-EDIT: Hell, ANU even offers a B Asian Studies/ B Arts double degree. )Meldrum said:But surely you don't need to waste a few years on an arts degree. There's books all over the shop about language, culture and suchsuch.
I'm also quite sure they won't ask you for a degree in Chinese culture in order to work for them.
No no no! I've not got a problem at all with the arts degree - I hate those snobs. Rather, I don't think there should be a whole degree on it.santaslayer said:It'd be a very nice complement to say, a commerce or engineering degree. (Which ANU has. I'm talking about the asian studies ANU offers, not a general arts degree.-EDIT: Hell, ANU even offers a B Asian Studies/ B Arts double degree. )
But to answer your question, it is dependent upon what majors you do. Some examples of job opportunities include:
1) Marketing
2) Banking and Finance
3) International Trade
4) Tourist Industry
5) Federal and State government Departments (LOTS!)
6) Media
7) Translation
For Postgrads:
1) Training
2) Teaching
Interpreting the above post, you don't seem to have a problem with the Asian Studies degree but rather, the arts degree in general.