That sounds complicated. Japanese universities attach great importance to students' comprehensive quality, including Japanese test scores, reserved test scores, high school scores, English proficiency, in-school test scores, recruitment interviews and so on.
Naturally, if a child does well in the exam at home, there must be a greater probability of applying to a successful prestigious school in Japan. However, it doesn't mean that students with poor domestic exam results can't apply for good schools when they come to Japan. In fact, they can be diligent in many aspects. Teacher Ma Xiao has seen many cases in which China failed in the college entrance examination, but successfully applied to a famous Japanese school.
In most of the materials that must be submitted to apply for Japanese undergraduate courses, the most important thing is to keep the test scores in addition to the Japanese proficiency test scores.
The results of the entrance examination can be regarded as an essential item in the application. Only when the entrance examination results meet the requirements of the school can the art school examination and interview be carried out. Therefore, it can be said that the test scores depend on the level of institutions that students can run in Japan.
Then tell us about the demand for test scores in key universities in Japan. There are only some famous universities here.
1, first-class universities (top 9 universities)
Old Seven Imperial Universities (Huada, Peking University, Osaka, Tohoku, Nagoya, Hokkaido and Kyushu), tokyo institute of technology and hitotsubashi university.
The total score of staying in the exam (non-Japanese narration) is 680 =+ English level.
2. Institutions of the second category (ranking before and after 10-20)
Public universities in China: Tsukuba, Kobe, Hiroshima, Chiba, Yokogawa, Dongwai, Imperial Teahouse, September 1st, Okayama and other national universities.
Private universities: Waseda, Keio and Shangzhi.
Duration of wishing: In Waseda in July, Keio and Shangzhi ended-10 and started-10.
It is best to keep the test score above 80% of the total score (about 650)+English level.
3, the third kind of colleges and universities (ranking more than 20 -50 colleges and universities)
It is stipulated that Japanese (not narrative) is 280 ↑, comprehensive+math class is 280 ↑, and the total score is suggested to be 600. English requirements depend on the choice of major.
4. The fourth type of universities (universities ranked 5 1- 100)
Leave Japanese (no narration) for about 300. For general literature and history, it is best to stay in Japanese (without narration) for 250 points+. The comprehensive score of liberal arts in mathematics class should be above 60% as far as possible. If it is science and engineering, it is best to take Japanese (including narration)+math class+science and engineering, with a total score of more than 550 points. Naturally, the lower-ranking colleges and universities can do better than this score, but not lower than the average score.
5. The fifth type of universities (universities ranked 10 1-200)
Some colleges and universities don't have to keep test scores, but they will have on-campus exams (mostly in the first stage). The vast majority of colleges and universities have no explicit provisions on the results of staying in the exam. Most universities with 100 or above require scores above the average. Before and after 200, some liberal arts majors in universities contain N2, so there is no need to submit test scores.
6, the sixth kind of colleges and universities (after 200)
Basically, it is required to have N2 or stay in Japanese (200 points+).
7. Category VII (Special Schools)
Choose one of three options: announce the test results, N2, and take the on-campus test. You can basically go by paying the fee (except for beginners in Japanese).