Parallel volunteer's admission rules can be summed up as 16 words, that is, "scores first, voluntary, one-time filing, no repeated filing".
Voluntary declaration has three characteristics:
First, when enrolling students in various stages and batches of colleges and universities, candidates with high total scores in the college entrance examination are given priority, that is, scores are given priority;
Second, each candidate's college volunteers are in order, and the computer files are searched according to the order of college volunteers, that is, the schools filled in front are searched first;
Third, parallel volunteer implements "multiple simulations, one application, and no supplementary report", that is, provincial and municipal examination institutes conduct simulated applications before formal application, and at the same time communicate enrollment plans with institutions with too many or too few applicants, and no supplementary report will be made after application.
1. What are the admission rules and procedures of one of our candidates, parallel volunteer?
If there are six parallel volunteer (A, B, C, D, E, F) in the first batch of undergraduate courses (some provinces enroll students in the form of professional groups in colleges and universities, and one professional group in each school is a volunteer, and there may be dozens of volunteers),
A, b, c and other volunteers in turn. When filing, candidates' files should be placed in a school (college professional group) first. If the results are not enough, the candidates' files will be placed in B school (college professional group). If you meet the requirements of school B, you will no longer apply to CDEF colleges and universities, and so on, and the school (or college professional group) you want to attend most will be filled in front.
Parallel volunteer reported in accordance with the principle of "rush, stability and security":
Rush, rush: As AB, I volunteer to go to an ideal school that I hope to reach. If this school has a small number of applicants, it may be a good school with low scores;
Steady and steady: the school that takes its own achievements "opposite the door" should be a CD volunteer, as long as the number of applicants in the school did not increase significantly in that year, it should be no problem;
Guarantee a guarantee: take schools with lower scores than yourself as EF volunteers, as a guarantee, in case ABCD volunteers have insufficient scores.
However, it should be noted that "rushing" should be cautious and certain, not blindly rushing. Of course, one of them won't hurt.
2. Why do you suggest that you choose "subject to adjustment" when filling in your volunteers?
When volunteering, we suggest that universities choose to "obey the adjustment", because generally speaking, a good school after graduation is more important than a major, and institutions such as 985, 2 1 1 are more competitive in society. If they don't obey the adjustment, it is basically difficult for a good school to be admitted to their favorite major.
After exiting the archives, we can only wait for the collection of volunteers and the next batch. The next batch is divided into two books. If you can't get into one batch, you can still be admitted to two colleges and universities.
As for volunteering, let alone 100%, it is not a good school, and a few people have applied for good schools, but basically they don't want to go. It is difficult for you to choose your favorite major, which basically needs to be adjusted. It is better to directly let the schools with better volunteers in front obey the adjustment.