College entrance examination, referred to as "College Entrance Examination", is a selective examination for qualified college graduates.
The general college entrance examination belongs to the provincial unified enrollment standard selection examination, which is led by the provincial education department, organized and managed by the provincial education examination institute, and implemented by the recruitment agencies in each district and city. The candidates for the examination are fresh graduates from full-time colleges and universities.
In essence, it is the connection between junior college education and undergraduate professional education, and the 3+2 model is implemented, that is, three years of full-time study for general college students and two years of full-time study for general undergraduate students (three years of clinical medicine).
Undergraduate enrollment target:
Only this year's outstanding ordinary full-time vocational college graduates, some provinces should be able to register for previous graduates (including retired ordinary college soldiers who entered ordinary colleges and universities without examination). Different provinces, cities and schools have different regulations. Some provinces, cities and schools require a score of 425 in CET-4, and there is no record of failing.
Some provinces, cities and schools do not have this requirement. For details, please refer to the policies of the provinces in that year. The college entrance examination registration is limited to undergraduate colleges in the province where the major is located, and it is not allowed to apply across provinces. Moreover, the reported major must be consistent with the major studied, and some places (such as Hebei Province) have allowed cross-disciplinary examinations.