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It is recommended that you choose liberal arts, after all, your liberal arts are better than your science grades. In the future, you can apply for an art undergraduate (literature and history) in the college entrance examination. Many universities offer majors such as animation design in the liberal arts, much more than in the sciences.
You can also go to the college entrance examination volunteer book and take a look.
By the way, I think the only thing that has anything to do with junior high school knowledge is English.
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Elect Politics There are few politicians or choose geography.
Unless you're good at anything else.
Otherwise, there is no need to add chemical biology.
The hard 2 ones. I'm 3 tall
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Personal opinion! First of all, you don't understand what your interests are, you only know that the elders give you the idea that it is a more lucrative career in their opinion!
In fact, the liberal arts and sciences are not very separate from the choice of future majors, as far as animation design is concerned, it may be more suitable for science, and you are a man or a woman? This is also a little related, men are generally more reasonable!
In fact, you have the determination to study hard, and I think human agency is powerful! If you read literature, then you will be the best in liberal arts, and you will also be a strong person in science!
Also, reading is a good way out, but it's not the only way out!
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Since your grades in political history are never less than the excellent rate, and your physical chemistry is not very good, then I suggest you study literature.
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Determine that mathematics is good for studying literature, but there are fewer liberal arts computer majors
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Choose a science subject. First of all, there are really very few liberal arts students who can be admitted to good universities, and I can be responsible for saying that liberal arts students suffer more from poor mathematics, because liberal arts students are almost the same, history and geography are all about the same, it is difficult to open the gap, and the key to good or bad grades is mathematics and English. Many of my liberal arts classmates couldn't get into the first line because they scored more than 50 points in mathematics.
Secondly, there are many opportunities for science students, and I am not good at mathematics, and I get more than 20 points in a single subject, but it is easy to open up the gap in other subjects, like I am better at English, and I can basically neutralize it.
Therefore, it is better to choose science. It's true.
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Liberal arts and sciences are actually the same. As long as you study hard, it's actually the same! Liberal arts universities admit fewer students because there are fewer students of liberal arts. Isn't it good to think about financial talents? So I don't want to recommend her to study literature!
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In fact, there are quite a few girls like this. To be exact, more than 50% of girls have this condition. Me too. However, I decided to take science. He is now a freshman at Tongji University.
Let's come to Wang Po to sell melons first. I'm also bad at math, and one thing I'm worse than your classmates is that I don't work hard enough. Our teacher insisted that I study literature, but my mother and I sternly refused, so we formed a bond with the teacher.
When I was a sophomore in high school, I was busy with the Olympiad, and my grades dropped quickly. In the end, the Olympiad won the second prize, which is equivalent to invalidation. It was very depressed, and the grades fell again.
was looked down upon by the teacher. Later, the results of the third year of high school soared. Until the final college entrance examination, I was the first in my class.
Although I only scored 107 points in mathematics, nearly 30 points lower than the average score of my class, all other subjects were at the level of Tsinghua University and Peking University. It's only the same thing, but it's not bad, right? Later, none of the teachers dared to look down on me.
Our math teacher was scolded by the principal for two months. Hey
I'm embarrassed to nag for a long time. Actually, I want to say that it's not that terrible to be bad at math. A score of 107 in mathematics can also be admitted to a prestigious university with 211+985.
Physical chemistry does not require that much mathematical ability. All you need to do is to master every key point in the first and second years of high school, and build your own knowledge structure in the third year of high school. I believe that for hard-working children, this is absolutely no problem.
Judging from the situation you gave, it is better to choose science. From the perspective of my classmates, it is generally not good to study liberal arts at a school that emphasizes science (probably because my classmates are too uncompetitive, of course), because the impact of good teachers on grades is absolutely important. For a diligent child who is studying science in a science school, it is impossible to "learn badly".
Hope it helps.
Finally, I wish you both good results in the college entrance examination.
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This math is said to be the key to pulling points if you want to learn literature. But after all, there is still so much time to review or something, if you lose him very hard, there should be no problem, if you learn well or not, it is a floating cloud, which is no problem to learn seriously, the most important thing is interest. My school also emphasizes science and light literature, but I don't think there's anything wrong with studying literature.
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Uh, sister, haven't you ever thought about making up for the class or something?
In other words, I never passed English in my freshman year of high school, there was no biology in my first year of science, so I didn't pass all of them, and I scored 22 points in physics, but I was able to keep above 80 in liberal arts every time, but I didn't like to study politics, so I still chose a very bad science major.
Then I made up classes in the summer vacation, and I learned physics in the first year of high school again, and I also consolidated mathematics. After the start of the second year of high school, I began to study hard, and every day I only had an English exercise plan, and I listened carefully in class, and if I didn't understand, I teased Oak Pei's reference book and asked my classmates to understand. When I entered the class in the second year of high school, I was almost about 15 from the bottom (more than 70 people), and after the second year of high school, I had a peak of 128 in English, and I could maintain a score of 70-80% except for occasional diving in mathematics and physics.
The pinnacle of the third year of high school is 150 in the whole school
The beginning and the result are actually not the most important, you can't say that I'm not good, I won't work hard, you ask yourself are you really only this level? In fact, it is not possible, your potential has not yet come out, it depends on whether you can make this determination.
I don't know how tall you are now, but if you are enlightened. The chances are still great. It's true.
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Choose science,,, your liberal arts and science scores are about the same,,, but if you choose liberal arts, you must not memorize ,,, literature, if you study literature, you will still score points ,,,in Chinese and mathematics, and you will be cautious in the liberal arts college entrance examination, Sun Ye is still less,,, electives in physics, chemistry and biology will be high in the electives,,, no matter what the wide and bright chain chooses, studying hard is the king, the key is prudent.
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Personally, I recommend choosing science. There are a lot of things that need to be memorized and memorized in the liberal arts, so if you don't think you can handle it, choose science. Poor math is not a very serious problem, math is actually a very regular thing, once you master the principle, you will be handy.
If you really don't feel comfortable, you can also summarize some answer templates by yourself, and then memorize these templates, I believe it will definitely help. Other science comprehensives, biology can be said to be the liberal arts in science, and most of them need to be memorized. In addition to the principles of redox, the rest of chemistry is the memory of some phenomena and the investigation of equations.
It's also easy to master. Physics requires some effort, and it's also a very regular subject.
Remember not to compromise on one over the other, and to keep your Chinese and English scores. After all, the college entrance examination looks at the total score.
What you learn in high school doesn't really have much to do with college. The purpose of high school is to enable you to choose a better university of your choice. So after high school, it's likely that you'll say goodbye to math.
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My daughter's. I'm pretty much the same in the arts and sciences, and I'm the same as you, and I'm not good at it, so I chose science, and I mixed it well.
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It is recommended that the study of science and liberal arts is not only about memorizing a lot of things, but also requires a wide and deep understanding of many things, and liberal arts is too big and difficult to grasp. It is recommended to study the text
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There are three kinds of unfilial piety: studying literature, going to graduate school, and having no object. You can do it.
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No matter how smart a student is, he or she has to work hard in science, and he must do more questions, of course, first of all, he listens carefully to the lectures and understands the textbook.
The following information is for reference on choosing your own decision.
Regardless of liberal arts and science, they all correspond to many majors, all of which are good majors, and there are also majors that are relatively not easy to find a job, such as history and philosophy in liberal arts, geology and archaeology in science, etc., and it is meaningless to directly take liberal arts and sciences. Moreover, no matter what major, even if it is a relatively poor major, if you can learn it well, you can still have a good future, even if it is a good major, if you learn a mess, it is not easy to find a job.
So, the question is not whether liberal arts or science is better, but whether I am better suited to study liberal arts or science? Which of these two subjects will play to my strengths more, which one will I study better, and which one will I really be interested in? Only by finding the answers to these questions can we make the right choice.
If you are suitable for yourself, can study well, and are interested, you will be able to get good results in the college entrance examination in the future, and you will have a greater future if you enter a good school and a good major. This is the crux of the matter, and to talk about the merits of liberal arts and sciences without these things is just talking on paper.
If you are good at science subjects and have no interest in political history, then you are obviously choosing science. If it's the other way around, it's obvious to choose liberal arts. If you feel that there is a subject in chemistry and physics, but you can't study political history well, then I think it's best to choose liberal arts, because if you don't do well in physical chemistry, you may be pulled down by others by tens or even hundreds of points, and as long as you put effort into studying political history, you will not be pulled down by others so much.
As for mathematics, for a liberal arts student, if he has an advantage in this area, then he can study liberal arts to ensure that he gets a good score in the college entrance examination. If a student feels completely powerless with math, then it is best to choose the liberal arts as well.
When you're not sure whether you're best at liberal arts or science, or prefer liberal arts or science, there's a way to close your eyes and imagine what kind of person you would most like to be in the future. A scientist, an economist, a politician, an architect or whatever. Then ask yourself what is the most important knowledge you should have to become such a person, whether it is partial to text or reason, and at this time, you will find the right answer.
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We just finished two months, and the liberal arts really have to be memorized, and the science class told me that if you don't do the questions, it's useless to just listen to them in class, and if you don't like to memorize, then you have to be diligent and choose the science subjects, do more questions, and think about the future.
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First of all, choosing liberal arts and sciences has a practical impact on what major to study in college, because science and engineering are naturally not swollen and need liberal arts students, but the key depends on what university you apply for, and the proportion of liberal arts and science students recruited by each major in each university is naturally different.
As for finding a job, in fact, if you are a professional counterpart job, science and engineering jobs are more, especially the lack of technical personnel in enterprises, but pure science (theoretical natural science) and pure liberal arts are not easy to find a job, any society is a small demand for theoretical talents, and a large demand for practical talents. Engineering is better off looking for a job, and there are reasons for that. Studying science is naturally the foundation of engineering, but it is still necessary to focus on cultivating one's practical ability.
It's not that you can't study literature, as long as you have the ability to learn anything, you can become an elite, so you don't have to worry about it.
The selection of arts and sciences should be based on the learning situation, personal preferences, ideals, and social needs of each subject, and the words of parents are only a reference. If you hate math essays, it's easier to do, but from the perspective of exams, it depends on whether you choose a liberal arts or science with a high score. In short, reality should be combined with ideals.
Finally, based on the fact that if you like physics, it is recommended that you study science (you should be good at studying literature, politics, history and geography, but generally not good), and be a science student with cultural accomplishment and humanistic atmosphere, which is a comprehensive talent.
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Suggestion. You can write as a student.
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Applying for college must have something to do with arts and sciences, this must be clear, you study liberal arts, college is not easy to choose science, a lot of chemistry and physics you don't understand at all, so the choice of high school has been half of your choice of college, so the choice of arts and sciences should be considered from a distance, not one-sided for some reason.
You's**? The college entrance examination does not test physical education, but only 3 (outside the number of languages) + 3 (Wen Zong: political history and geography; Rationale: >>>More
At this time, it's an interest, if you don't like to study, it depends on what you want to do in the future, I chose it because I was good at science, but I was very tired and didn't like to study in college, so it was worth the loss, hehe, but it's okay now, you just rely on your interest, it's not easy for people to do what they like.
The big topics of the liberal arts are not good, now it is normal, through the sophomore training is absolutely can be improved, as long as you have the heart, this can rest assured, geography is relatively science, it needs to be improved through a large number of topics, in fact, both liberal arts and science need to be memorized, but the memory of liberal arts is relatively large. >>>More
History + Geography + Biology, or History + Politics + Geography. >>>More
If you don't have a subject that you are particularly good at and enjoy. I don't have a good background at home. And you're a girl again. >>>More