The risk of rushing is very high, and it is easy to be downshifted. Volunteer to rush. If you choose an unpopular major, the probability of success is relatively high; If you choose a popular major, you are likely to be reassigned. The professional ambition is not clear, and the focus is on the students of the school. However, for those majors with clear professional aspirations and popular majors, there is a high probability that they will enter the major they don't like.
First, candidates who choose majors. When filling in the college entrance examination volunteers, some candidates have high professional requirements, only want to learn their favorite major, or choose a major, and are unwilling to accept the major being transferred. In this case, if the examinee's score is not high, he or she is expected to press the line and go to the file. If adjustment is not allowed, the possibility of being admitted to his or her desired major is very small, and the possibility of leaving the file is very large.
Second, candidates who do not pick majors. Although the scores of such candidates are not high and they can move to the next level, most colleges and universities will transfer them to other majors due to their lack of major selection, and the chances of such candidates dropping out of the next level are not high. It's very valuable.
Therefore, it is incorrect to simply believe that the probability of dropout of line pressing candidates is too high. As long as the examinee can enter the file and go to the school, professional adjustment is allowed. Generally, it is very unlikely that the examinee will leave the file.
When students choose one or two volunteers as the target of the rush, if they have made clear the restricted information (physical conditions, foreign language, etc.) of the major application in the school and fully meet these requirements, they can choose to obey the professional adjustment. Then the examinee will not be withdrawn after being shifted. Of course, if the school is not shifted, the students will not face the situation of being shifted or slipping as long as they make reasonable arrangements for the "stability" volunteers.
However, if the students are rejected when they volunteer to rush because they do not obey the professional adjustment or do not meet the physical conditions, etc. Don't be too nervous. At this time, we need to calm down and choose the best and most suitable school in the next batch.
Because everyone in the parallel volunteer has only one chance to pitch. If you are downshifted, what you need to do is:
Pay attention to the latest news released by the provincial examination institute, wait for the release of this batch of volunteer information, or start considering the next batch of schools and majors that volunteer to fill in.