1. Unified recruitment of undergraduate courses:
Unified recruitment of undergraduate students refers to the unified enrollment through the admission standards stipulated by the state, and students can choose their own majors when they enter school. The enrollment method of unified recruitment of undergraduate students is mainly aimed at high school graduates, through college entrance examination results, comprehensive quality evaluation and other ways to enroll students. Undergraduate students need to participate in full-time courses, experiments, internships and other activities on campus, and the weekly study time is generally more than 30 hours.
2. Full-time undergraduate:
Full-time undergraduate course refers to a university established with the approval of the Ministry of Education and qualified to award undergraduate and above degrees. Full-time undergraduate teaching is full-time, that is, students need to participate in courses, experiments, internships and other activities on campus, and the weekly study time is generally more than 30 hours. Students can choose the major they are interested in when they enter school, complete the credit requirements and pass the exam before they can get a degree.
Therefore, the difference between the unified recruitment undergraduate course and the full-time undergraduate course is that the former's enrollment method is unified enrollment according to the admission standards stipulated by the state, while the latter is a university approved by the Ministry of Education. In addition, the unified recruitment of undergraduate students is mainly aimed at high school graduates, while there is no age limit for full-time undergraduate students. In addition, both require students to participate in full-time courses, experiments, internships and other activities on campus, but there may be some differences in the arrangement of study time.