After the candidates' files were put into colleges and universities, colleges and universities began to assign majors to candidates according to the professional allocation rules in the admissions regulations. For the same batch of candidates, there are three ways to determine the major: "score first, voluntary clearance, and professional grade difference". Each different admission method will have a direct impact on the admission results of candidates. Candidates should carefully study the professional admission rules in the articles of association and adopt targeted strategies before filling in their volunteers, so as to be admitted to the intended major more smoothly.
Extended data:
The principle of "score priority" (also called "clear score") means that colleges and universities rank candidates' professional aspirations from high to low, and once candidates who meet the requirements of professional investment appear, they will be "locked".
The principle of "clear willingness" (also called "major priority") means that colleges and universities queue candidates according to their major order. First, candidates are admitted from high to low according to the first volunteer major. When one volunteer is insufficient, it will be supplemented by two volunteers. If it is not full, it will be admitted from other volunteers.
The principle of "professional grade difference", usually the practice of colleges and universities is: when the candidate's first major volunteer can't be admitted, then consider whether the second and third major volunteers can be admitted.
References:
People's Network-How do college entrance examination candidates read the "Admissions Guide" and clarify the admission rules