Is Canada a good place to move if your like me?
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Is Canada a good place to move if your like me? - Hi I'm 15, and a freshman in high school I've always wanted to move to Canada and go to collage there to become a vet. I don't have much family I just mostly have my mothers side and we barely know most of them so basically i know my grandma, aunt, and great grandma including my mom i also have a step brother. Anyways so when i finish high school how do I do this whole moving to Canada well first I'm going to visit then I'm going to deiced but 99.9% I'm going to stay how do i get green card? How do i get a student visa? then how do i become a Canadian citizen? I've been looking up collages and i'm trying to decide between 2 also how much is the cost? will I be able to pay it of? also can i make it (because i know Canada is very expensive). Thank you very much B.t.w i currently live in Arizona.
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Answer:
Assuming that you want to move to Canada because it is colder, and it rains/snows, I would first go to Oregon or Washington for college so that you can see how much you like the climate compared to Arizona. I currently live in New Mexico, and as soon as I get my high school diploma, I am on my way to WSU because Washington is the exact opposite of the desert. The only reason I am suggesting not going to Canada is because of the hassle involved with getting over the border for the first time (with all your stuff), and if you do decide to visit your family later on, you wont have to cross the border to do so.
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Other answers
Whether or not it is a good place for you is only something you can decide. However, for most people moving to Canada isn't a choice since few people can actually meet the immigration requirements. There are no green cards in Canada. It is known as permanent residency. You need either immediate family to sponsor you, have highly skilled job offer (requiring a college or trades degree, work experience, ) plus you compete for one of 10,000 spots (based on education, language skills, having lived in Canada, having friends/family, etc.), $1.6M to qualify as an investor, recent Canadian university graduate plus found a job in Canada within a year of graduating, or a valid refugee claim. You require background checks, medical exams, and proof you can support yourself (i.e. significant amounts of money in a bank account). Depending on the category the process can take up to five years. A veterinary degree in Canada is post-graduate studies. You need a (four year) undergraduate degree first then three years in veterinary college. In either Canada or the US, expect this cost around $300,000. I have no idea if you have access to that kind of money. For a study permit, you first need to apply and be accepted at a Canadian university. Once accepted you fill out an application form, attach your letter of acceptance, bank statements, you passport, etc. to the nearest Canadian embassy or consulate. You'll then need to submit to background checks and medical exams.
bw022
If you want to go to college in Canada, the first step to take right now is to talk to your parents about financial matters, and what they've put away for your college education. To obtain a student visa, you & your parents will need a great deal of money, even if you can win a scholarship. You also need superior grades and more. Start researching universities for admission requirements, costs, etc. Do your homework! You have a lot of research to do, and you must be a superior student in every respect to compete for college admissions internationally. Canada does not have "green cards." And student visas are temporary non-immigration class of visas. Study the Immigration Canada website (google that!) to see what all you will require in the future if you want to immigrate. Of course, laws will change by the time you are old enough and have a good education, but that's where you start.
ibu guru
,Canada' is not very expensive. Certain PLACES within Canada are quite reasonable. For instance, you might try the Maritime provinces of New Brunswick or Nova Scotia, or Newfoundland. Each of those has decent colleges. You could also try outlying areas of any province. Vancouver, Toronto, to a lesser extent Montreal are all move costly. Alberta is quite expensive for housing, but taxes are low and unemployment low. You cannot simply become a citizen. There is a points based application system, and you would not qualify. However, you can quite easily get a student visa that will allow you to live and work in the country while you go to school. You can then look at applying for more permanent status when you graduate. Canada is overall a wonderful place to live, much freer and less stressed than most places in the US. Whether it is right for YOU is a personal choice.
The Great Quizoo
Go to the citizenship office to apply for citizenship. You will have to take a citizenship test. CANADA IS A GREAT PLACE TO LIVE! :)
skier15
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