If you are a non-computer major, then computer should be a basic subject like me.
The textbook of computer examination is the seventh edition of Computer Culture Basis published by China Youshi University Press, and there are supporting experimental classes. I want to read both books. Of course, textbooks are the most important, and all questions can be answered in textbooks. There are exercises in that experimental tutorial, and there is a saying that a small part of the exam questions will be the original questions above. I wonder if this is true. In addition, the reference book I used at that time was a core question bank published by Hongbo, which was ok, but there was a wrong answer (it seems that this is a common problem in college students' counseling books)
I suggest you do the questions while reading, chapter by chapter, that is, read the book first, then do the exercises in this chapter, find out the weak links in your review, mark the corresponding knowledge points in the book, and it will be convenient to find them when reviewing at last, and browse before the exam. After reviewing the textbook once or twice, do a simulation.
Computer review should start as soon as possible. If you like English, you'd better watch it every day. The specific time allocation depends on your English level. If you can keep the simulation questions above 80 points in the later stage, it means that you have almost reviewed, and you can reduce the time and intensity. Because there are many detailed test sites in the computer, you can't cover everything, so you will find that it is rare for you to pass 90%. In the real exam, the computer can't score, but English and advanced mathematics.
In addition, the types of computer questions are very fixed, generally single choice, multiple choice, judgment and fill in the blanks. Just look at the real question.
Ok, after answering so many questions, give chase some points, hehe.
Finally, I wish you a smooth admission to the undergraduate course!