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What's the difference between undergraduate courses and continuing courses?
College-upgraded undergraduate course refers to taking the national adult unified examination (college-upgraded undergraduate course) after graduating from junior college, and registering for the examination at the same time with the adult college entrance examination every year (during May each year). The final graduation certificate is an adult undergraduate degree (including a degree).

Insert: Students who belong to ordinary full-time higher education and national tasks. Only some undergraduate colleges (34 universities) in the province apply for centerfold, and whether it can be interdisciplinary depends on the regulations of the school you apply for. 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).

Special purpose books belong to ordinary full-time higher education and national task students. The scope of special books is generally limited to the original area, majors must match, and schools have few choices.

If the undergraduate course belongs to adult education, you can choose different majors from the original college, and the scope of running a school can be spread all over the country (see the enrollment brochure published in the local college entrance examination every year).