Sophomore and junior students will have elective courses, which are important chemistry courses, such as structure, analysis, materialization and so on.
The senior year is generally an internship or something, and the postgraduate entrance examination is generally at the end of the senior year.
If you want to take the postgraduate entrance examination, you should complete all the chemistry-related subjects, and pay attention to what you like better, whether there are graduate students in this school, whether they are recommended, whether they like those majors, and whether they want to study in other schools outside. This is the foundation. If the freshmen and sophomores learn well, they will not bring too much pressure to the review exams of the later majors.
Try to pass CET-4 as a freshman and CET-6 as a sophomore, so as not to put too much pressure on yourself, because the postgraduate entrance examination requires a lot of preparation, and the test paper will be simulated later.
The public course of postgraduate entrance examination can be prepared in junior year, and some good remedial classes can save some time.
I'm a junior, and I want to buy some counseling books for postgraduate entrance examination, mainly public courses and English. For professional courses, you should pay attention to the papers of the schools or majors you have taken in the previous three years, and you can ask seniors for help.
You can't give up class activities, rest on the one hand, and isolate yourself on the other, because if you enroll graduate students in our school, you will definitely pay attention to your comprehensive strength in the class. In addition, students who are isolated from the surrounding areas will have no one to help you when you encounter difficulties in the future.