1. Understand the school's policies: Understand the school's policies and procedures for failing courses, including whether there are opportunities for make-up exams or re-examination options.
2. Ask for help: communicate with professors, tutors or academic consultants in the school, seek their help and advice, and learn how to improve your academic performance.
3. Make a study plan: evaluate your learning methods and time management ability, make an effective study plan, and improve your academic performance.
4. Accept make-up or retake exams: If the school provides opportunities for make-up or retake exams, actively participate and strive to improve your grades.
5. Seek counseling: If you encounter difficulties in a particular subject or field, you can consider seeking academic counseling or private tutors to improve your understanding and learning effect.
6. keep a positive attitude: failing the exam is a failure, but it doesn't mean you can't change the situation. Keep a positive attitude, believe in your ability and make progress.
The most important thing is to keep in touch with the school's academic support team and tutors, listen to their suggestions and guidance, maximize academic performance and achieve academic goals.
If international students want to complain about the relevant exam results, they can follow the following steps:
The first step is to review the examination paper.
Although the teachers of most courses will arrange students to review together, some courses do not have such a link, so foreign students need to send an email to the course teacher or the marking teacher to apply for a review paper, find out what they think is unreasonable and record it so that they can write a complaint letter in the future.
The second step is to make an informal complaint. International students need to find the relevant person in charge or send an email to the tutor, indicating that they want to make an informal complaint and fill out the relevant forms according to the procedures stipulated by the college.
If the informal appeal is successful, that is the best result. If they fail, foreign students will have to cheer up and file a formal appeal.
Formal complaints can generally be divided into three stages, namely, college level, school level and off-campus regulatory agencies.
It should be noted that appealing is a technical job. Without rich experience or strong evidence, Xiao Haima does not recommend foreign students to appeal blindly.
Because once they fail, international students should prepare new evidence to support their demands.
In most cases, foreign students need to prepare four materials in advance when making formal complaints: complaint letter, proof of informal complaint results, relevant test papers and evidence supporting their claims, such as diagnosis certificate and report form.
In addition to strong evidence, it is also important to write a complaint letter.
It should be noted that when writing a complaint letter, foreign students must pay attention to their own wording, don't be too emotional and don't exaggerate the facts.
Secondly, it is best to explain clearly the purpose of writing the complaint letter at the beginning of the letter. Don't say anything irrelevant to Dachuan's complaint and don't sell it badly.