Here are my suggestions. Mathematics focuses on the motif, and if you understand it, you can draw inferences, so you must do more and practice more. Physical chemistry is the same. Sea tactics are absolutely useful, but not blind. You should take the wrong book or write the wrong page number on the cover of your exercise book. Don't be too confident in your memory, and read more wrong questions, you will understand better.
To accumulate Chinese, you must first pass the basic questions. Pinyin and other multiple-choice questions can be improved through daily practice. You might as well read more high-scoring compositions, especially argumentative essays. There are routines. Your writing is good, and your score will not be low.
Absolutely remember politics and don't be lazy, because it is not easy to get low marks and high marks in politics. At that time, my scores in Chinese and mathematics were not very high, 120 or more, and English 140 or more, all of which were materialized scores, but it would be good to keep them up to a certain extent. Chinese, math and English really account for a lot of scores. Can't lose points.
Don't be lazy in English, read more books, and your grades will go up slowly. Hang in there!
Wish you success!