Let me talk about the rules of volunteering. He pai hang ba
There are five volunteers, A, B, C, D and E, and each volunteer has six majors. A, B, C, D and E are parallel volunteer. That is to say, Volunteer A was not accepted. If you volunteer B, your score will not decrease. And ... If both volunteer A and volunteer B can enter, then-those who enter volunteer A will not enter volunteer B, so these five parallel volunteer should have a certain gradient.
There are differences in scores between majors. Generally, the professional grade difference of colleges and universities in other provinces is 1, 2, 3 and 5 points each, and 4, 5 and 6 are parallel. So if you are not admitted to major 3, your score in this school will be less 10. Colleges and universities in the province also have professional achievements. Generally, colleges and universities in the province are set to 1, 2, 3, with 2 points each, and 4, 5, 6 are parallel. Total * * * is down by 6 points.
There's one more thing that must be made clear to you, parallel volunteer's biggest weakness. If you both reached the entrance line of A and B, but you didn't go too far beyond the entrance line of A voluntary school, and then you were finally tested out because of poor professional performance, then B voluntary school thinks that you have been voluntarily admitted by A, so you won't be admitted. If you estimate that it is only a few points beyond the promotion line of a voluntary school, it is safer to obey the deployment as professionally as possible.
This answer is a bit long, but please read it carefully, word for word.
Then talk about the comparison of rankings.
Look at the school's ranking last year. If it's less than 65,438+0,000, try it. If it's far from 65,438+0,000, think for yourself. If it is higher than 65,438+0,000, choose a high-scoring major. If it is above 1 000, the risk is basically less.
Well, it's hard to say whether it can be washed. You can weigh it yourself.