Although the number of applicants for the college entrance examination reached record highs in 2020, some schools not only failed to recruit students, but also stopped recruiting a certain major. Why?
As we all know, many schools have opened popular majors, and these majors are expanding their enrollment every year. Moreover, some students don't understand the unpopular major, which makes no one dare to apply for this major. For example, the industrial automation instrument in our school only accepted 34 students in the first year, and most of them volunteered to adjust. In the second year, only 19 people applied for this major. In the third year, the major was stopped.
This is a living example. Although the number of college entrance examinations will reach a new high in 2020, schools should also consider schools and students. Few students were enrolled in the first year, and the number of students enrolled in the second year failed to meet the plan. In the third year, the school naturally called to stop this major. These unpopular majors and new majors fall into a vicious circle, which eventually leads to the change of this major or the integration with other majors.
In fact, it is a good phenomenon that a school's major has stopped, and it is responsible for both sides. Schools should complete the planned enrollment, and the suspension of unpopular majors is conducive to the completion of the planned enrollment. This is also responsible for students. If only ten students sign up for a major, then students will definitely regret applying for this major. Stopping the majors of individual schools is a timely stop-loss method. It's not that the school can't complete the teaching plan, but to avoid students' regret.