So, since you want to sprint to the forefront, let's master English from now on. Chinese depends on your own feelings about the topic, and the teacher just tells you the answering skills of senior three. As for math and physics ... personally, I suggest you lay a good foundation with your teacher. Some problems in these subjects seem difficult by themselves and need help.
Also, don't be superstitious about those reference books. Those things are the author's simplification, omission and modification of the teaching materials, which are often the places where the college entrance examination questions are given to blacks (the national volume, biology in 2006, physics in 2007 and chemistry in 2008 are all concentrated on the contents that the reference books think are not important).
My opinion: Find an English class to learn new concepts II and III, and just listen to the teacher carefully and do your homework at the beginning of school. The kind of reference book you mentioned is only used once in the first round of review in senior three, and it is only a waste of money to buy it now.
The above is based on experience. I just finished the college entrance examination this year. I didn't buy the handbook of heavy and difficult points. Wang Houxiong threw it away as waste paper, and my grade was the first in my class. ...
PS, well said has nothing to do with learning MS ... My class won the first prize in mathematics, and when I walked to the exam, I introduced it in ancient vernacular, which startled the teacher on the spot.