It is one of the choices for college students to study abroad. However, the existing problems are:
1, it usually takes a long time to upgrade to the undergraduate course. For example, it takes up to two years to transfer to the United States, and the school has to review the transcripts and compare the courses.
There are bridging courses in Britain and other countries, but few universities offer such courses. Second, the university rankings are generally not high.
Go abroad directly for postgraduate study: If it is a three-year junior college, universities in Britain and Australia all offer pre-master courses or postgraduate certificates or postgraduate diploma courses, so students have the opportunity to apply for and then study for a master's degree. In this way, compared with junior college, you can get a master's degree in a shorter time and quickly improve your academic background. If you still want to save money, you can consider the preparatory course for studying abroad offered by domestic colleges or institutions.
It should be pointed out that, as the postgraduate preparatory course (master's preparatory course) is a bridging course, there are many schools and institutions offering such courses abroad, and the quality is uneven. When recommending, the study abroad agent is not necessarily the most suitable solution for students.
The above information is a routine requirement, but because different majors in each school have their own special requirements, if a university needs to know more detailed application requirements, it can check the previous successful application cases according to its own college background and achievements through the volunteer reference system for studying abroad.
The reference system for studying abroad volunteers is as follows:
/Ding Wei/ ozs=300-3 1 1
In the reference system of studying abroad, we can see which schools our teachers and sisters went to, which majors they applied for, how many language scores they got, which study agent they used, and so on.
The query is as follows: