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How do I prepare for a job interview?

Asked by Avtoservis_gmei — Dec 30, 2025 — Education & Reference Resolved

I have a job interview coming up and I'm nervous. What's the best way to prepare? What questions should I expect and how do I answer them well? What should I wear? Should I bring anything? How do I research the company? What questions should I ask them? How do I make a good impression?

✓ Best Answer
admin — Score: 4

Teach it to someone else, even an imaginary student. If you can explain a concept simply and out loud, you understand it. If you stumble, you've found the gap you need to study. They call it the Feynman technique and it really works.

7 Answers

✓ Best Answer
admin — Dec 30, 2025

Teach it to someone else, even an imaginary student. If you can explain a concept simply and out loud, you understand it. If you stumble, you've found the gap you need to study. They call it the Feynman technique and it really works.

4
Avtoservis_inei — Dec 31, 2025

Strunk and White's 'The Elements of Style' is a tiny book that will make you a better writer almost overnight. Every student should own a copy. It's cheap, it's short, and the advice in it never goes out of date.

4
Charlie Reeves — Dec 31, 2025

Flashcards still work. Old-fashioned index cards. Make them yourself — the act of writing the card is half the learning. Quiz yourself, shuffle them, put the hard ones in a separate pile. Low-tech but it gets results.

2
Alice Hartwell — Dec 31, 2025

The library is full of free resources people forget about — encyclopedias, reference librarians who will literally do research for you, study guides. And the librarians are thrilled when someone actually asks for help. Don't be shy about it.

1
Avtoservis_hnei — Dec 31, 2025

The standard advice on this is actually pretty good. But what nobody tells you is that consistency matters more than intensity. Studying 30 minutes every day beats cramming for 6 hours once a week. Build it into your routine.

0
Bob Nakamura — Dec 31, 2025

Go to your professor's office hours. Seriously. Almost nobody does, and the ones who do get better grades and better recommendation letters. Professors WANT to help students who show up and care. It's the most underused resource in college.

0
Dave Modem — Dec 31, 2025

I graduated college 5 years ago and wish I'd known this earlier: the specific knowledge you learn matters less than learning HOW to learn. Develop good study habits and critical thinking skills and you can adapt to any subject or career.

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