How to choose a school for postgraduate entrance examination?

It mainly includes the geographical location of the school, the popularity of the school, the type of the school and the availability of resources.

Geographical location:

Beijing and Shanghai have the most developed economy, the most talented people and the widest vision, which can increase personal knowledge. From Wuhan to Beijing, the first feeling is like entering the city from the countryside. All kinds of new things, business models and entrepreneurial talents that have never been seen before give people a feeling of being bright at the moment.

Those schoolmasters around you who are five times smarter than you but ten times harder than you make the answer impossible. So while choosing a school, you are also choosing a city, and the resources you can access in this city are also very important. However, because of their location advantages, schools in Beijing and Shanghai are more difficult to take the postgraduate entrance examination than other local schools at the same level.

School visibility:

Famous schools have their own "aura", such as Tsinghua and Peking University. Even if their majors are not ranked so high in the country, the test difficulty is basically not lower than that of schools with relatively high professional rankings. Under normal circumstances, the six schools of Qing, Bei, Fu, Jiao, Zhe and Ren have relatively large auras, and the general majors are relatively difficult to test.

School type:

Some units like to recruit from specific schools. For example, the same management majors, Beihang University management majors enter the aerospace system relatively more, and financial colleges have relatively more management majors, which is related to the characteristics of the school.

The atmosphere of engineering schools is relatively dull and lacks humanistic spirit, but the academics are solid and the style of study is good; Social science schools have an active atmosphere, and various community activities are dazzling. They agree with the humanistic spirit of democracy, legal system, equality and freedom, but their style of study is relatively impetuous. Comprehensive schools are relatively balanced. What type you choose mainly depends on what kind of atmosphere you want to live and study in.

Availability of resources:

For example, the proportion of enrollment, the proportion of walks and unified examinations, and resources such as review materials for professional courses. This information is generally not available on the Internet, but it is very important and needs some efforts to collect.

Consider these options:

1. Call the college admissions office first and ask how many people apply for the exam every year, how many people are admitted, and how many people are recommended.

2. If the school's reply is vague (official), then go to the second interview site to "catch" the seniors and ask for the contact information of 2-3 people in order to consult the information and experience. Moreover, the notes used by seniors and sisters are of great reference value. You can see their review ideas at that time and suggest finding a way to come over or buy them.

3. It would be much easier if Internet channels such as the Postgraduate Entrance Examination Forum could find enthusiastic seniors and sisters.