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It is illegal for international students to work part-time in some countries, and it is also illegal for countries that allow part-time work, so don't do anything illegal, otherwise you will be sent back to your home country.
The idea of working part-time to solve all expenses is very unrealistic, reasonable working hours, the money earned can only solve your living expenses, without fluency in foreign languages and considerable work experience, it is impossible to find a good job, there is no high salary, and it is impossible to solve the cost of living and tuition.
Go to a small language country, in order to attract students who come to learn the Chinese language, many countries are tuition-free, but in order to do this, you have to learn another year of language in China, a year of language, can you use it freely? It is advisable not to go to countries with small languages. Go to an English-speaking country, go to Australia, study science to facilitate immigration, and take your parents over later.
In terms of cost, if you study science or engineering, it is better and cheaper to go to Western Australia and South Australia, about 180,000 a year, if it is a business, then in Sydney, the cost is high, about 220,000 a year, but the business undergraduate is 3 years, which is one year less than engineering. However, it is difficult to find a full-time job, and it is not easy to immigrate unless you are very good.
If you are dedicated to working, it is not good to waste your studies, and it is recommended to work less in the year of the preparatory department, otherwise you will not be able to pass the pass and go to the undergraduate.
I'm also a senior 2 student and I'm going to Australia in January next year and have a question for me.
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Japan can earn it all back, and then the Netherlands and the three countries of Northern Europe can earn back their living expenses if they follow the regulations, but if they work in the dark, they can earn it all back, and Canada and the United States can earn it back if they can find good jobs and not get caught.
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Canada, the United States, all countries of Western Europe. But remember: you can only work in Chinese restaurants, unless you can get a work permit in some European countries, you can go anywhere to work.
The United States and Canada are absolutely no fun. Your Social Security card will read: Not for Hire
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You can't go to any country to earn tuition and fees! Including in China.
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Canada should be able to.
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You are so naïve!! It's not that easy to work part-time!!
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Hello. 1. Requirements: 12 years of education, N4 level of Japanese, family financial ability, resolute will to study abroad and simple purpose--- which are general requirements and conditions. In practice, it's a different story.
2. The specific conditions are actually the conditions of the school, some language schools require N5, some require N4, and some even require N2There are also requirements for a college entrance examination score of not less than 50%, and some TOEFL requirements are also blocked. And so on.
3. There is no part-time work and study in Japan, and the so-called part-time teachers are legally part-time, but there are strict requirements for part-time jobs, and the current trend is to increase the check of overtime jobs, and increase the possibility of refusal when the stay is renewed.
4. The cost of the scale: intermediary fee (if needed) 0-40,000; Handling fee (such as notarization, etc.) 2000 yuan; Tuition fees in Japanese schools range from 70 to 1,200,000 yen, which also varies from school to school. Living expenses include accommodation, transportation, meals, etc., and are about 70,000 yuan per year.
5. In the early stage, the family should prepare at least 10-120,000 yuan as the bottom line.
Non-specialists.
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My own conditions, Japanese must be N4 or above, so I will take the exam. Like the above requirements, N2 pull, TOEFLA, and college entrance examination scores, I am speechless, is this applying for a university or a graduate school?
A few years ago, it was said that the legal working hours were 20 hours a week, but it was generally exceeded, and no one cared about it. However, if you work at the specified time, it is enough for your living expenses, if you are frugal, for example: go shopping at the specified time at night, half price in the supermarket, haha
I can tell you clearly that if you exceed 1w, you can shake your head and leave, you need to go to a language school first, and then take the international student exam to enter the university, the general language school is in 1-2 years, the tuition fee is in rmb years, the living expenses in the Tokyo area are 15-18w years, and in other areas 10-15 years, if you don't work, this is the case.
The accommodation and transportation meals mentioned above add up to 7w, and the accommodation fee needs to be paid for half a year at the beginning, and then spend 6w a month for 12 months a year with an average of 5000 living expenses
The start-up capital is 10-15w and you can almost go to Japan.
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1.International students are allowed to work part-time in Japan. You can earn your living expenses in Japan by working 28 hours per week in accordance with Japanese law while you are studying abroad.
2.If you have a high school diploma, you also need to meet the two basic requirements of obtaining a basic certificate of Japanese language and a guarantor to withdraw 200,000 yuan in deposits. 3.
In Japan, tuition and living expenses are generally about 120,000 to 140,000 yuan. It depends on your own consumption.
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30,000 US dollars as a fixed fund guarantee, and it is only so much money to find an intermediary, Japanese level 2, you need to go to Japan to study the language or learn Japanese in China for a year.
Over there, tuition and living expenses are another amount of money.
There is no doubt about China!
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