Three years of junior college education and two years of undergraduate education, a total of five years. Different schools have different tuition fees. Please consult the colleges and universities you are applying for.
The College to Undergraduate Exam, or "College to Undergraduate Exam" for short, is a selective exam for qualified college graduates.
The general college entrance examination is a provincial selective examination with unified enrollment standards. It is led by the provincial education departments, organized and managed by the provincial education examination institutions, and organized and implemented by the district and city recruitment institutions. The examination is selected for the graduates of vocational colleges (junior colleges) from full-time general colleges.
Essentially, it is the connection between college level education and undergraduate level professional education. It implements the 3+2 model, that is, three years of full-time study in general colleges, and two years of full-time study in general colleges (three years in clinical medicine).
Enrollment target
It is only limited to the current outstanding ordinary full-time vocational college graduates. In some provinces, graduates from previous years can apply for it (including retired ordinary junior college soldiers who enter the ordinary junior college without examination).
The regulations vary from province to city and from school to school. Some provinces, cities and schools require that, for example, Shanghai has passed 425 points in CET-4 without failing records; Some provinces, cities and schools have no such requirements. For details, please refer to the policies of each province in that year.
The unified college entrance examination is limited to the undergraduate colleges in the province where the college is located, and cross provincial application is not allowed, and the major must match the major, and some places (such as Hebei Province) have allowed cross professional application.