Physics and chemistry cover most science and engineering majors, and history covers most liberal arts majors, with a wide range of majors to choose from. This combination brings together subjects that are difficult to distinguish between arts and sciences, and requires both arts and sciences.
In addition, there are several better combinations:
1, physics+chemistry+politics
Because it is not easy to get high marks in physics and politics, the number of applicants in this group is small and its competitiveness is weak. Politics has little to do with other materialization, so it is difficult to be partial to literature because it needs rote memorization.
2. Physics+Chemistry+Geography
This combination has a wide range of majors, similar disciplines and small span. Geography is called "science in liberal arts", which is not difficult, so we can allocate more energy to physics appropriately.
3. Physics+Chemistry+Technology
This combination cleverly avoids the combination of "material/culture/life" and "material/culture/history" and occupies the advantage of combining science.
4. Politics+History+Geography
This combination is the most traditional combination of liberal arts, with a single subject, a large amount of recitation and limited professional application. If you make it clear that you want to apply for liberal arts majors in the future, you can choose this combination.