21 Postgraduate Entrance Examination with 430 points and a Master's Degree in Computer Science at Jilin University with a score of 941

In order to protect privacy, I won’t mention the specific scores. The total score is about 430, and the professional courses and mathematics are both 140+. The following is my review plan, and the students can refer to it.

Working from March to early July, mathematics from 6:00-7:30 in the morning, professional courses from 7:00-9:00 in the evening

Afterwards: About 8:00-11:30. Mathematics, 14:00-17:30 Professional classes, 18:30-22:00 Mathematics + English, exercise 2-3 times a week

Public Courses:

1. Mathematics:

   Materials: Review of the complete book (Li Zhengyuan), Zhang Yu’s 18 advanced mathematics lectures, Tang Jiafeng’s advanced mathematics lecture notes, Li Yongle’s line generation, textbook

         Zhang Yu 1000 questions, Tang Jiafeng 1800, Li Yongle 2019 660 questions, real questions, mainstream simulation questions (Zhang, Li, Tang, Hefei University of Technology)

   From March to June, in the basic stage, I mainly used Zhang Yu’s Advanced Mathematics Lectures 18, Tang Jiafeng’s Advanced Mathematics Lectures, and Li Yongle’s Line Generation. I brushed up on Advanced Mathematics twice. I seemed to have passed Line Generation once and Probability Theory once. I don’t understand. The flip book is marked. Didn’t watch much video. Completed part of question 1800

   From July to September, in the intensive stage, I mainly brushed the questions, selectively brushed 1800, and Li Yongle brushed 660. I reviewed the whole book twice and the real questions once. During this period, due to hesitation between counting one and two, I also brushed the whole book on the second. At this stage, the main purpose is to check for omissions and fill in the gaps to form a relatively complete knowledge framework. The areas you have mastered will ensure that you can do the questions correctly. You will focus on marking the wrong questions or the areas you do not understand. After that, you will only look at the marks. I also watched some videos. Personally, it’s better to choose a suitable one and follow it all the time. I’ve watched a little bit of almost every teacher’s video, but it might be confusing and I haven’t been able to learn from everyone’s strengths.

   From October to December, I mainly studied the real test questions in the early stage, and also watched some focused or summarized videos, such as Gao Kunlun’s summary of real test question types. You will find that there are many things you don’t know, and you need to learn knowledge points and problem-solving ideas. In addition, it is recommended to study the real questions in categories first, and then make sets according to the exam time. The last month is spent on simulation questions. Zhang Yu’s is not recommended as it is too difficult. Tang Jiafeng, Li Yongle and Li Lin are all okay.

2. Professional courses:

    Information: King's Road, Red Book

    March-June: I have absolutely zero basic knowledge. I started by studying the basics of data structure + operating system + computing network. After reading one chapter, I took multiple-choice questions and skipped major questions. I passed the data structure twice, but the code I still don’t know how to do it, so let’s put it down for now. A brief review of the operating system and computer network

   July-August: The Red Book, the front part of the data structure is very well organized, there are knowledge points as well as real questions and algorithms. I studied it carefully and have a little grasp of the code. There are many aspects of Jiwang that are different from Wangdao. I also reviewed it carefully and memorized some of the knowledge points.

    September-October: Textbooks. If you don’t understand something clearly, you still need to look through the textbooks. Then I started to study the real questions, data structure + network calculation. The first pass of data structure was mainly questions other than algorithms. The second time I sorted out all the algorithm questions, classification, linear tables-trees, etc., except for the codes of graphs and some trees, I can almost understand it. The real questions on Jiwang were relatively simple, so I read the ppt again.

    November-December: Do final questions, sort out algorithms and programs, and record some difficult questions on network computing, but let go of some that are too difficult and have no answers. I went through the real questions again and sorted out some code questions from the after-class exercises. Before the exam, I basically sorted out various algorithm programs by myself, and I didn't know how to brush them repeatedly, as well as some important and difficult points in calculating the network.

English:

    Real questions (yellow book), vocabulary (anki)

    I memorized the vocabulary twice between March and June, but my basics are okay

    July-August: Reading for the first time, my method is actually more casual. I suggest you read Tang Chi’s reading logic, which provides some ideas for question types. I will translate some articles carefully.

    September-October: Memorize phrases and read them for the second time. I have carefully translated the ones in recent years, but I still can’t understand some of the ones that have been translated. Repetition is still more important. In addition, often read foreign publications. Gestalt 00-17, I watched Li Yuji’s video, but I mainly rely on doing it, without any skills.

    November-December: Read it for the third time. It’s not about the answer, it’s about how to find the answer, why you chose this one, and why you didn’t choose another one. The new question type 00-17 is divided into categories. I watched Wang Sheng’s video and it was very good. If you study it carefully, you will gain something. Some years it was really difficult and I did it 2-3 times. Gestalt was also brushed a second time. I prepared the composition relatively late. I read Pan Yun and some templates I found online, which were mainly functional sentences and some structures. I didn’t prepare much templates, so I crammed into a few short essays before the exam. However, it is recommended that you prepare your own templates and accumulate more sentences to memorize them. The exam room tends to go blank

politics:

     1000 questions, simulation questions (Ji Jie, Xu Tao, Mi Peng, Xiao Xiurong)

      In fact, I have always been relatively bad at politics. I studied the 1,000 key questions twice in September, Xiao Xiurong 3 times from November to December, and Xu Tao’s excellent question bank. I also read the leg sister’s sprint recitation skills handout and some multiple-choice knowledge point handouts compiled online. , made choices in all the simulation questions, and finally memorized Xiao Si, Xiao Xiurong, and the Eternal God

Retest:

    I retested the Red Book and typed out all the real questions, final questions, and Red Book handouts on the computer from January to February, mainly to get an impression. Then try to implement some of them in code and make them run. Generally speaking, although some high-level languages ​​are difficult, most of them are relatively simple. After studying the real questions, final questions, and handouts, you can basically cope with the exam. In addition, I also took a look at the retest real questions included in the gift.

     For the computer test, I took the computer test class of Shengji Class. This is indeed more difficult, and some mistakes are difficult to find. Fortunately, there is no computer test this year. But the senior explained it very carefully and patiently, so it was not a loss.

    Generally speaking, during the entire preparation period, due to the heavy burden of cross-examination, I pursued speed and thus neglected some quality. This should also be avoided as much as possible. Haste makes waste, and you should never let go of the knowledge that can be mastered in one round of review. to the next round. At the same time, you must have your own notes and your own knowledge system.

 In addition, my better habit is to make monthly plans and daily plans based on progress, such as what goals to achieve each month and what to complete every day. Never use time as a goal. Time does not represent efficiency. Reprint

Guess you like

Origin blog.csdn.net/weixin_40020400/article/details/117107914