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I think you're a hard-working student. My advice to you is: If you guarantee that you can speak English very well.
Don't waste time on words. You can choose to come here to study for your second year of high school. Then two years to go to college.
But it's the third year of high school here. You have to take more than 4 courses to apply to the university. An average score of 90 or above is required to be a top-notch university.
It's still the same sentence. Unless you're good at English. You can come here to study in high school and go to university.
If you can't guarantee that your English is not very fast OKI suggest that you get your high school diploma and go to the preparatory department here. There are a lot of transfer credit courses here.
It's a year or two of freshman years at the college. Then if you have enough credits, you will transfer to a prestigious university. of the people I know.
Many of the transfer credits for the preparatory department are successfully transferred to Vancouver, which is also famous for being a well-known UBC and SFU in CanadaBut you must take classes and do homework exams carefully to make it easy to transfer to a prestigious university to continue your sophomore year!
You're quite right. There are many high schools abroad. Like me, I've chosen to draw and act before.
It's all more interesting. There are also Japanese, French, cooking, design, bands, and sports. This course is also relevant to your future university application.
For example, I see a lot of people who choose to draw art in that class. In the future, I plan to apply for design and art schools. But this kind of school is an academy.
Famous design schools abroad are all from the academy. It won't be from the university. And some people also choose a very dull economics or business.
They're just going to apply to a business program at a top university.
And as for the first floor, it is impossible. Then I think it's a matter of personal ability. It really has nothing to do with money.
I know a lot of people who go to prestigious universities. It's just that I really see that you're not trying hard. But don't think it's any easier here.
You're going to go to a prestigious university. The hard work is similar to the domestic college entrance examination. But I just think you're working hard in your home country and you're not going to a big university.
There's a lot of competition. If you work hard here, you may have the opportunity to go to UBC, a prestigious school like the University of Toronto.
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It is impossible to go to a prestigious university.
Schoolmate! Let's be clear, no matter how much money you have, you can't go to a top university over there, like Toronto.
My sister went to Canada, where she had to study for a year of preparatory courses and exams, which was quite difficult.
You're a little stupid. If only I would go to Hong Kong.
Accept it.
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It is now much easier for Chinese students to come to Canada for high school than before.
To go to a first-class university in Canada, your high school score must be above 85% (the year I applied to the university, the average first-class university high school admission score was around 89%), and the first-class universities I refer to include (McMaster, Toronto and other universities).
The notion of starting electives in high school is "neither right nor true." It depends on what you want to study in college. It is also common for people to choose a new major after completing their first year of university.
If you're going to choose a college major using high school subjects, then any science college major will require grades in high school English, chemistry, biology, math, etc. (usually a grade 12 average). If you are fully planning to study art, then you can avoid courses such as chemistry, but usually art subjects will have higher language requirements and grades in an art elective (e.g. drawing, and also provide portfolios, such as your own art creations).
In the way you are now (no college, no job). Not sure what kind of "immigration" you will handle? ”
If you come to Canada for undergraduate studies and work in Canada for one year, it will be very, very easy to apply for Canadian independent immigration. But the problem is that in today's Canadian job market, it's not easy to find a job in the arts...
You don't want to do research, you don't want to be a nerd later. But now many jobs require relatively high education and work experience...
To tell you the truth, more than 50% of people in Toronto have a bachelor's degree or above... The intensity of the competition can be imagined. Many immigrants with doctoral and master's degrees are vying for jobs as undergraduates.
Undergraduates compete with college students for jobs. Nowadays, many jobs also require a master's degree.
Another way to get into a Canadian university is to apply to a university as a Chinese high school graduate. The requirements are still your high school average and the score of the Chinese high school leaving exam.
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It seems that few people can explain clearly.
Then I'll talk to you about it.
The competition in China is fierce, but there are many people at the top who are doing a good job of studying and other things. But not all of them are like that.
You can apply directly to the high school of ** University now, anyway, my personal recommendation is to apply for the public one, because the private one, unless it is an aristocratic school, otherwise the general private school is opened by the Chinese, it makes no sense to go, and you can't learn anything.
As for prestigious universities. It's easier to get in than in China, but it's more or less an average score of 80 or more and IELTS or above, but the university can be spelled differently from the domestic one.
In addition, the University of Toronto, depending on the major, is divided into 3 campuses, and the admission scores vary.
And then the best business at York University seems to have an average score of 90 or more, and there is no IELTS above 7, so don't think about getting in.
You don't have a Canadian identity, so you have to pay about 1w4 Canadian dollars for public education.
It is true that you can choose courses abroad, but it is relatively freer than in China, and after completing the compulsory courses, you can take courses in the direction of your major.
As for what someone upstairs said, what is the Ph.D. diploma in Toronto, I guess it's a domestic diploma, and a foreign diploma can't find a job, so I can only say that he's rubbish.
If you go abroad in high school, you either have to apply for college early so that you won't be in a hurry to graduate later, or you can apply for college as a domestic country when you graduate from high school, or you will go to the middle of high school unless you have super good English, otherwise it will be difficult to graduate on time.
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The IELTS score is very important, followed by the experience of social practice and so on, which should be written in the application. It is also important to contact the professor, although it is difficult, but it must be done. The level of English must not be low.
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If you are planning to immigrate to Canada, you can go to the second and third years of high school, and it is like this in Canada, after three years of high school in Canada, you don't need an IELTS score. Apply to college based on your high school grades over there. If you're planning to be in Canada, I don't know if you know, it's good for foreign children to be admitted to a good prestigious university, but even if you don't get into the college there, it's very promising, but it depends on what you think about it.
Personally, I still think that a person's comprehensive quality is very important, and everything will come a little, at least your comprehensive quality is not bad. Reading is only one aspect.
Hope you have good considerations.
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The start date of public high schools in Canada is: January or September each year.
Private schools and international schools have more flexible enrollment times: September, November, January, April, July.
Planning from the entry grade.
If Shen ** takes the beginning.
3. Senior 1 or lower: Public schools and private elite schools and church schools are good choices, because they represent the original Canadian secondary education, with rich courses and guaranteed education quality, so that students can accumulate in a process of up to three years or more, and better integrate into Canadian education, life and culture.
If you apply for a junior or sophomore year of high school: international schools are the first choice, because you go to Canada to study in high school.
Second, students in the third year of high school hope that their children can enter Canadian universities in the short term, while in international schools, the transition period is relatively short and the learning courses are relatively concentrated, which can often make students improve faster in the short term and have the opportunity to enter suitable Canadian universities.
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Here's what you need to do to prepare for high school in Canada:
First of all, sufficient financial guarantees are required.
In Canada, the annual cost of completing high school and college is about 15-200,000 yuan (including living expenses), in order to successfully obtain a visa, parents need to provide at least 50-600,000 yuan of deposits as a guarantee, because the embassy has certain requirements for the history and ** of funds, parents had better make some relevant preparations in advance. At the same time, parents should also guide their children to learn how to manage and use money, cultivate children's good living and spending habits, and avoid affecting their children's normal learning due to comparison and lack of moderation.
Secondly, it is best to have some basic knowledge of English.
In a completely unfamiliar language environment, almost everything needs to be communicated in English, and if the English foundation is very weak, it will have some very negative effects in the beginning. Children who want to study abroad should try their best to lay a good foundation of English before going abroad, so that students can quickly adapt to the new study life after going abroad.
Again, get admission to a relevant school in Canada.
If you want to study in Canada, you must make a reasonable study plan, choose the right school according to the actual academic level and submit the application form, until you get the official admission letter issued by the relevant school in Canada.
Finally, arrange the food and living of the guardian and the child.
There are difficulties and setbacks that come with studying abroad. Before going abroad, remind children to be psychologically prepared, pay attention to cultivating self-psychological adjustment ability, communication ability and self-care ability, and know how to deal with difficulties correctly, or who to turn to for help. Children who go out to high school are generally under the age of 18, and they should arrange regular accommodation and guardians before going abroad, and arrange the children's diet and daily life.
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Hello, I'm in high school in Ontario (9th grade) younger than you, I hope you don't look down on me. First of all, I also took IELTS, and the average score was (I took New Oriental's one-on-one in China), but here, you don't need an IELTS score (just high school), but to university, you need it. It's just a short period of time that the vocabulary improves rapidly, and high school students don't need an IELTS score (if your domestic score is not very good, you can still call it an IELTS).
I recommend that you enroll as early as possible, because you are a Visa student, you need an ESL (you have to take), and you have to finish ESL before you can go to a regular English class (English class with foreigners, just English class, other classes such as geography and history, no problem), and besides, you want to graduate, what grade must you be in, what class (about a course) for example (for example, you are in grade 11 and you have two years to graduate, okay, then you have to finish English class in grade 12, Then you're going to have to take ESL, and you have to wait until you graduate from ESL before you can move into normal English classes, which means you have to start with English classes in Grade 9) so that you might not be able to graduate on time. As for credits, you can transfer credits (you have to transfer your domestic credits to be certified by your school and you have to get it stamped). As for the specifics, since I'm not in the same province as yours, there may be some problems (I'm from Toronto).
As for the materials, you have to prepare too many (more than 60 copies) such as household registration book, ID card (you, your parents', and even your relatives', vaccination card, birth certificate, physical examination form, domestic guardian notarization, if you are not yet 16 years old (you need a foreign guardian's notarization), parents' salary notarization, tax notarization, your basic information, parents' basic information (including educational background since childhood), and whether you have a criminal record, there are too many, not to list them one by one, or to find an intermediary to ask.
I can't help this because I'm not from British Columbia, but in Ontario there are still provincial exams for the fourth year of high school (grades 9-12), and there are still things I don't understand.
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To apply for high school, you need to provide your transcripts of the past 2-3 years of secondary school, IELTS scores are not required, and there is an English proficiency test for general secondary school or preparatory admission, and if the language is not enough, you will be arranged to take a language course first.
It is recommended that you study well in the second year of high school in China to get high scores, and at the same time study more English in a targeted manner. Students under the age of 18 or 19 are required to apply for Canadian guardianship to study in Canada. We believe that qualified intermediaries can play an important role in your application for studying abroad.
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You can go to public and private high schools in Canada in the second year of high school, but you can't just go to the last year or re-enter the second year of high school, or don't go to high school, and go directly to the preparatory department for one year to get a Canadian high school diploma. As for IELTS, you don't need to take the test, even if you have IELTS, you have to take the test.
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It's best to find a good agency that will give you some specific plans.
You need to take IELTS, TOEFL and have a financial guarantee of about 500,000 yuan.
It is best to go after graduation because you have to prepare for going abroad a year in advance and have language training, otherwise you may be denied a visa.
If it's the ninth grade, then you can only graduate from the 12th grade every year.
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If you go out early, you will have a higher success rate in applying to good universities. You have a lot of content on the Internet, you can go to the Far Broadcasting Network Canada Study Abroad Channel to see, I have seen several articles about the study abroad program for high school students, and there is also a detailed introduction to relevant universities in Canada. In recent years, many domestic middle school students have gone to Canada, especially in Metro Vancouver. >>>More
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Determine the country of application, get a preliminary understanding of the intended school and the corresponding application requirements (GPA; ielts/toefl;GRE GMAT) while maintaining and improving the average score and preparing for the corresponding test. >>>More