Let me tell you how to review:
First, math. Math four upstairs has been changed to Math three. I suggest that you don't read blindly first, and first understand the test sites of the outline, where to take the test and where not to take the test. It's just that I didn't read the outline in the exam that year and blindly reviewed it. Finally, I read the surface integral. After understanding the test sites, start with the basics. If you have more time, I suggest you take a good look at the textbook first. I think you should pass the high number line generation probability once in your junior year. Junior year, the second review, combined review book (the review book is ok, but I think Chen's review book is too difficult, not suitable for poor foundation) When I was a junior, I studied the review book carefully and combined the knowledge points in the book. Before June 10 in senior three, you should read the review book 2-3 times. Then 10 months later, I began to do simulation questions and real questions, doing more and practicing more. If the math problem is true, it looks simple, but it is actually a bit difficult. Think about it, it only takes one year for those expert teachers to study a set of questions, and it is definitely not built.
Then English, not much to say. Chinese is nothing more than reading, practicing and reading comprehension. I suggest that you don't recite words, do more reading comprehension, and remember words in the process of doing the questions. It is suggested to use the red "New Oriental Postgraduate Entrance Examination High Frequency Vocabulary". There are too many sparks. Not suitable for short-term study. I bought a copy of Spark that year, and it took me a semester to read the words.
Third, it is politics. Read more about the syllabus and Ren Rufen's guide. This kind of thing just reads more books and has no other skills. As for the postgraduate class, I think listening to current affairs and politics is enough. Everything else is a lie.
Finally, talk about specialized courses. I only know the specialized courses of Southwestern University of Finance and Economics, but Xiamen University doesn't. Every year, the scores of professional courses of Caida University are not high. Many students said that the teacher was grading. Actually, it is not. Because we only look at the textbooks he arranged, the highest score is over 1 10. If you want to get high marks in professional courses, you must read more in-depth textbooks than the designated textbooks (of course, on the basis of learning to designate textbooks). I used Pindick's microeconomics and Donne Bush's. Economics is something that you will definitely forget after reading it once, and it is particularly easy to forget. Even if you read it three or four times, you should sum up more. The model inside is deduced and can't be remembered. Draw more pictures in it. Be sure to draw more. "Political Economics" can refer to Cai Da Liu's textbook. Every year in the middle and late August, there will be a postgraduate class (run by Caida itself) with teachers giving key explanations. Last year, he won a lawsuit with 12 points. Just find someone to buy a note then, don't listen. Also, the real questions over the years are very important, because every year the exam questions will have the previous real questions!
Finally, you are only a junior, so you have a lot of time. Take your time! Good luck!