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영어면접 질문 모음 + Tips 본문

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영어면접 질문 모음 + Tips

AMY_SHIN 2013. 10. 21. 20:57

1. What are your parents’ occupations?

2. Do you live with your parents?

3. Were you in the military service? Where and when?

4. What is the year and model of your car?

5. Do you own or rent your home?

6. How far do you live from this company?

7. Do you speak a foreign language? except an English.

8. How much time do you spend with your family?

9. In your opinion, What makes a happy marriage?

10.Who is the boss in your family?

11. Is your spouse employed? Will there be a conflict?

12. What contributed to your divorce? What have you learned from this experience?

13.Do you keep and follow a personal budget?

14.Do you own a life insurance policy?

15.Do you have a savings plan?

16.Are you in debt?

17.Have you ever been refused a bond?

18.Do you have a valid driver’s license?

19.Have you ever had a driver’s license revoked? Why?

20.When was your physical examination?

21.Do you have any chronic health conditions we should consider?

22.What college did you attend?

23.Why did you attend that particular college?

24.Did your family have any influence on your choice of college?

25.What was your major in college?

26.What made you choose_____________________ as your major?

27.Do you feel you made the right choice?

28.How have your education and training prepared you for the job?

29.What specialized training have you received to improve your job skills?

30.How did you do in school?

31.How did you finance your education?

32.Are you currently taking, or do you plan to take, any evening courses?

33.Do you subscribe to trade or professional journals? Which ones?

34.In the past year, have you attended any professional seminars or conferences? At your own       expense?

35.What are your educational goals for the future?

36.Did your grade point average reflect your work ability?

37.Name three things you learned in school that could be used on this job.

38.What was your favorite subject in college?

39.Did your college grades differ after military service?

40.Have you ever been tutored? In what subjects?

41.Why didn’t you do better in school?

42.Do you consider yourself to be a smart a person?

43.How important is job security to you?

44.Do you get bored doing the same work over and over again?

45.Do you prefer working as a member of a team or would you rather work alone?

46.What are the reasons for your success?

47.Do you like to work with “things”?

48.Do you like to work with facts and figures?

49.Do you like to work with people?

50.Are you absent from work often?

 

 

51.In what areas have you received compliments from your superiors?

 

Best Answer : I have always had high marks in job effectiveness, initiative, and enthusiasm. Because I look at each assignment as a potentially exciting challenge, my managers say I create excitement in my department. 

That spirit is contagious. It results in a greater team effort, less absenteeism, and higher output.


52. Have you ever been asked to resign? 

 

Best Answer : Yes, from the position of 본인직책 at 회사이름 in 근무했던 년도.

The request for my resignation arose because my job performance was consistently excellent.

My entire department was ready to resign because it disagreed with the management changes taking place, and I had to convince all six employees not to do so at the same time.

회사이름 was constrained by the effects of an unsatisfactory merger and became unresponsive to the changing needs in the marketplace. That was the major cause of their filing for bankruptcy last year.

In the meantime, my career has progressed very rapidly upward.


53.Have you ever owned your own business?


Best Answer : Yes, although it wouldn't have made the fortune 500, I am proud of it. The summer between my sophomore and junior years in college was the summer of 1976-the nation's bicentennial celebration. I had a friend at a design school who asked me to share expenses for an apartment for the summer.

The only problem was, neither of us had a job. Because we wanted to be outdoors, we didn't want to spend our summer waiting tables or working behind a counter.

 So we teamed up my friend's art skills with my emerging business skills. She designed and produced beautiful silk screened T-shirts of tall ships. I handled raw materials, inventory, sales, and bookkeeping. We got a street vendor's license and sold 3,000 shirts in just 10 weeks.

Each of us banked almost FOUR MILLION WON toward the next year's tuition, after we had paid our rent and other living expenses. We were outdoors, meeting people and having fun by day then up till the wee hours making more shirts each night. That was fun, too. It was with mixed emotions that we shut down operations two weeks before the semester began so we could lie on the beach and reflect on our success. All in all, it was my favorite summer.


54. How would you rate me as an interviewer?

55. What do you see as the primary impact of computer technology on society in the past ten years?

56. Have you been resistant to these changes? Or are you open and enthusiastic about the new technologies?

57. Do you consider yourself computer literate?

58. What computer platforms and programs are you comfortable using?

59. In your current position, do you make frequent use of e-mail?

60. Do you consider it to be an effective way to communicate?


 

 

 

 

<Tip - Worst / Best>


 

Don’t chew gum or smoke; don’t bring food or a beverage (even water). If you’re asked if you’d like something to drink, accept if you want, but don’t presume it’s all right to bring refreshments with you.


When your interviewer extends his or her hand to shake in greeting, don’t limp-fish your grip; make it firm, full of self-confidence. Make solid eye contact with each person you meet.


Don’t sit down until invited to do so. Then, sit upright; don’t slouch or sprawl.


Don’t give in to the tendency to talk with your hands if you, like many other people, do this when you’re nervous. Hold your hands in your lap if you have to, but don’t wave them around as punctuation to your remarks. Your interviewer will focus on your hands, not on what you’re saying.


As much as possible, refrain from interjecting your comments with uhs, you knows, um, and the like. It’s no sin to pause and say nothing while gathering your thoughts.  


Don’t take the ball and run with it, which means don’t talk so much that you dominate the interview. Don’t anticipate what the interviewer is going to say or ask, and most important, don’t interrupt. Likewise, don’t try to demonstrate you know more than the person interviewing you! Remember this is a conversation between people,not a soapbox from which you are expected to recite your knowledge and capabilities.


If you’re being interviewed by more than one person, focus on whoever is speaking or directing a question. Do not look only at the person you know to be in charge. Employers want to be assured that you are comfortable dealing with employees at all levels of the company. Treat everyone as your client or customer.

 

1.A smile. If you can’t fake it, just think about how lucky the interviewer is to be meeting you.

2.Direct eye contact. If it’s too much for you, look at the bridge of the interviewer’s nose.

3.Introduce yourself. Say, “Hi, I’m (first name) (last name). It’s a pleasure meeting you.”

4.A firm but gentle handshake. Rehearse. No live shark; no dead flounder.


Then, once you’re on the set (the interviewer’s office):

1.Head for the chair on your favored side (right if you are right-handed, left if you are left-handed). If you’re ambidextrous,you can take center stage. Just be sure there’s a chair behind you.

2.Stand there until you’re asked to be seated. (If you’re not asked, it’s probably because you’ve already drawn an SRO audience!)

 

 


 

Now, sit up straight, feet on the floor (women may cross their legs), and look the interviewer in the eye.