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Studying after immigrating to the United States

The second floor is right. You are an immigrant, not studying abroad.

I also immigrated here. I finished my junior year. I naively thought I read a lot, but I did it for a long time. They only accepted three courses I studied. . . . . .

As a result, I started reading again from my freshman year.

In fact, you need to prepare your high school grades now, and they have been notarized by the notary office. This is very important for you to enter a four-year university in the future. They need to see your high school grades. But if you don't mind, you can actually ask your school to list your academic achievements [open a few more in an envelope, and finally prepare three or four, and each new cigarette should be sealed with the school seal], and then go to the United States. They have a government department here that can convert their country's achievements according to your country's report card. I don't know exactly how and where to do it, but I know there is such a department.

Although it will be annoying, if you get good grades in domestic universities, all of which are above 80 points, then your grades will not affect your GPA, because it is related to your application for universities. If your grades are not very good, all of them are 7080 points, then you'd better repeat, because you study hard, your grades will be good, and your GPA will be high [out of 4.0=A, 3.0=B, 2. 0=C]

However, if your GPA is lower than 3.0, you can't find a good job after graduation, because a good employer will attach great importance to your GPA at school and graduation, so you should think about this problem. Don't think I'm too wordy.