In addition, Britain implements a single certificate system, so there is no such thing as a diploma, only a degree diploma. The certificate obtained by HND after one year of overseas recharge is the same as the certificate obtained after three years of British university courses.
In the last sentence, all HND programs in China are non-academic education. Three years without going abroad, high school education. If you go abroad to finish your undergraduate course, you will return to China with a high school education. If you finish your postgraduate study, you do have postgraduate education, but this is only your highest education. You don't have a first degree, so you don't want to be a cadre. If you don't care about a series of problems of the first degree, then this is a low-cost way to study abroad, as I said above, but I still suggest going abroad directly if you have the ability. HND's overall style of study is not good (this is a common phenomenon in major universities, after all, the admission standards are there), and the overall improvement of language learning in China in three years is not ideal.
You won't take the college entrance examination until next year, so as long as your family conditions permit, you might as well use the report cards of the first two years of senior high school in your third year, and then apply to the school. If you are late, you can wait for your diploma at most, so the school you can go to may be much better than HND (although HND was a top-notch course in Britain, schools with better rankings, such as King's College and Kent, did have top-notch courses, but they were basically not * * * but university graduates. Hull provided to HND is the best overall, and Oxford Brookes is also good now. The rest are low-ranking schools, such as Coventry and Greenwich. The adverse consequences of applying for graduate students are obvious. For example, if you graduated from Sunderland, the school requires you to have a first-class bachelor's degree, but if you rank better in York, you can get a second-class diploma of 1, which of course varies from person to person. )