Current location - Training Enrollment Network - Mathematics courses - What do you mean by one, two, three and four in the advanced mathematics exam?
What do you mean by one, two, three and four in the advanced mathematics exam?
Mathematics one

Advanced mathematics is fully tested except * (90 points), chapter 6 of linear algebra is fully tested (30 points), and chapter 8 of probability theory and mathematical statistics is fully tested (30 points).

Mathematics ii

In advanced mathematics (120), linear algebra got the fifth chapter (failed in quadratic form) (30 points).

Mathematics three

Calculus (74 points), linear algebra in the first five chapters (38 points), probability theory and mathematical statistics in the fifth section of chapter 8 (38 points)

Mathematics iv

Calculus (74 points), linear algebra entered the fifth chapter (quadratic form not tested) (38 points), probability theory and mathematical statistics (38 points) only entered the probability part, that is, the first five chapters.

Vector algebra and spatial analytic geometry, triple integration, curve and surface integration, ordinary differential equations only take mathematics as the last few sections.

Mathematics of science and engineering (I and II) has the physical application of high numbers, and economic mathematics (III and IV) has the economic application of calculus. In addition, there are many contents of calculus in Mathematics III, and the contents of calculus in advanced mathematics in Mathematics II are roughly equivalent to those in Mathematics IV (infinite series is not tested), but less than those in Mathematics III.

The difficulty ranks one > three > four > two.

Generally speaking, science and engineering students take math I and II, and economics and management students take math III and IV, but there are great differences between different levels or types of schools. For example, in Tsinghua, all majors take math I, while many low-level or liberal arts schools take math IV. The same major in the same school may be tested differently in different years, so we must pay close attention to the latest "Enrollment Professional Catalogue" of each school in late July and early August.

After a while, the "2007 Mathematics Postgraduate Entrance Examination Outline" should be published. If you are anxious to know more detailed differences, you can look at the 2006 one. Generally, two years will not make much difference.