Science students are the most difficult to assign points in each subject, with chemistry being the most difficult, biology second, politics third, and geography being the easiest. But for the academic level, geography is the most difficult, politics is the second, biology is the third, and chemistry is the easiest, and the two are almost completely opposite embodiments.
The more liberal arts subjects are, the easier it is for middle school students, and the average level of the scoring group is lower, but for the top students, it reflects greater chance, and it is more difficult to obtain high scores stably.
Chemistry is the most difficult for secondary science students, although these students choose science, but they do not have strong science thinking, and there are still a large number of students who do not choose chemistry because of the difficulty of chemistry.
The difficulty of biology is second only to chemistry, and its scientific thinking requirements are not as good as mathematics, physics and chemistry, but the difficulty is still higher than that of history, geography and politics.
Politics is slightly higher for science students than geography, because politics is a pure liberal arts subject and is closely related to history, and science students who do not study history have a natural disadvantage compared with liberal arts students who study history.
Geography is a subject with both arts and sciences, and the reason why liberal arts students are liberal arts students is that many of them lack scientific thinking.
However, when science students reach the level of academic masters, the difficulty of assigning points in different disciplines has reversed, and they have excellent scientific thinking, and the difficulty of chemistry and biology is a little easy, among which the difficulty of assigning points in biology is slightly higher than that of chemistry. Because I choose biology students, I focus more on physicochemical biology.
Geography and politics are more difficult in the liberal arts, not because they can't learn the liberal arts students, but because these two disciplines are more accidental and cannot establish absolute superiority.