However, neat and beautiful handwriting does have advantages! Because each question is assigned to a certain area, handwriting will make our score fluctuate slightly. For example, a 20-point composition is graded according to the score, and the candidate's score is between 13 and 15. Then, if the examinee's handwriting is neat and his face is neat, he is likely to get 15. On the other hand, if there are serious traces on the surface of the paper, and the handwriting is written in a grid or curly shape, it is difficult to read, and the probability of getting 13 will be higher.
Once a classmate asked me if I could answer questions with a 0.38 or 0.35 refill. I said no recommendation. The reason given is that the refill is too thin, so I'm afraid it can't be seen clearly when scanned on the computer. Then he went on to ask, are there any real cases where you can't see clearly because you use a refill? I can't find this, because there is only a total score, and there is no small score. Candidates don't know where to deduct it. When applying for a low score, no one knows whether it is because the answer is wrong or because the examiner can't see the deduction when stepping on the score. You can answer the question with any pen, provided that you can bear the risk brought by this behavior.
Some students may be afraid that the answers to small questions are difficult to identify, so write one and divide it into one line. Doing so will only waste a lot of text space and may eventually be incomplete. Whether we can see the answer clearly depends on our handwriting. As I said before, as long as the handwriting is neat and clear, even if the problem is not broken, the reviewer can see it clearly.
Therefore, applications must be made in order, which is the safest method. And usually we should develop the good habit of answering questions on grid paper. Some babies sell answer sheets, which are basically the same as those used in public examinations. The price is not expensive, you can buy some. Or use this grid paper I share below to do the problem. This plaid paper was shared with me by a student last year. There are 20*25 squares on a page. When you write to the next page, the following pages will automatically display grids. The fly in the ointment is that two punctuation marks typed in Chinese can't be put in a grid, which is different from the standard writing.