Once upon a time, high numbers have always been my "nightmare".
Class is like listening to gobbledygook, homework after class depends entirely on copying, and exams depend entirely on ignorance. Fortunately, I was lucky enough to pass, and I didn't become one of the people hanging on the tree.
From the moment I decided to take the postgraduate entrance examination, it seems that the "nightmare" will continue again.
At that time, I was thinking, should I take the math test or not?
However, in the majors that don't take math exams, I searched one by one, and it seems that none of them are my favorite.
It seems that only crustily skin of head!
Actually, it's nothing The most powerful thing is that, as a math "scum", I chose Math I, which has the most content and is more difficult.
To tell the truth, when I first picked up the advanced mathematics textbook and began to review (preview), I didn't even understand the concept of the first chapter, let alone the most basic calculus.
To put it bluntly, it is an out-and-out "zero foundation."
I believe many students, like me, are not good at math.
In the face of postgraduate mathematics, there may be nothing but fear.
Therefore, when reviewing for the postgraduate entrance examination, it is math that spends the most time, but it is math that is not easy to cross the line.
Mathematics for postgraduate entrance examination is divided into mathematics one, mathematics two and mathematics three.
Generally speaking, academic postgraduates of science and engineering take math one, masters of science and engineering take math two and economics takes math three.
The most difficult thing is Math 1, mainly because the examination range is wide, involving advanced mathematics, linear algebra, probability theory and mathematical statistics.
Moreover, basically all chapters will be examined.
This means that candidates need to spend more time and energy on review, so more students choose Math II with less content.