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What should the university do if it faces repeated study?
In the face of repetition, universities can take courses offered by their original classes, re-take failed courses and transfer them back to their original classes with the consent of the school.

Students who fail to repeat a grade are admitted to the same major in the next grade. If you can't arrange the same major because of the adjustment of the school training plan, you can adjust your major in your college and retake the exam in the next grade. The original credits are still valid.

Those who repeat from one grade to the next can also attend classes at the same time as the original class. If they pass the courses offered by the original class and fail the courses, they can apply to the college at the end of the seventh semester (the ninth semester of the five-year program) at the latest, and can be transferred back to the original class for study with the approval of the school.

Students in the prescribed school year, one of the following circumstances, given to repeat:

(a) The credits obtained in a certain academic year have reached 30% of the total credits of the courses taken in that academic year, but less than 60% of the total credits of the courses taken in that academic year;

(two) during the school period (four-year system excluding the fourth academic year, five-year system excluding the fifth academic year), the total credits of failing courses reached or exceeded 50% of the average credits of completed courses in that academic year.

Students are only allowed to repeat a grade once in the specified school year.

The examination and approval procedures for unqualified students who fail to repeat the grade should be carried out at the beginning of each academic year within 2 weeks after the end of the make-up exam prescribed by the school.