Job Recruitment Website - Immigration policy - I'm a freshman now. Where should I go if I want to go abroad after graduation?

I'm a freshman now. Where should I go if I want to go abroad after graduation?

Thank you for trusting me so much!

I suggest you consider Australia.

Aren't you in high school now?

Just in time. If you apply now, you don't need to take IELTS, because it is stipulated that adults over 18 need IELTS scores to study in Australia and Singapore. /kloc-IELTS scores are not required under 0/8 years old. So you should think about it.

Going to Australia requires at least 300,000 bank deposit certificates for more than half a year. You have to ask your parents to prepare this for you.

What you need to do is: apply to the school for your study certificate, as well as the transcripts of your courses, your birth certificate, and the role of your birth certificate is to prove your relationship with the person who provided you with funds.

English is still to be learned. If no 18 students apply for studying abroad, they need a year of preparatory course, mainly to learn languages.

Generally speaking, learning a language depends on one's family status. If conditions are good, it will be in Australia. If the family is a working class, you can apply for studying in Singapore. The advantage of going to Singapore is that the official languages there are mainly English and Chinese. You can't fully understand the language at first, so you won't do anything wrong. It will help you learn the language.

Many French schools need students from China to take the college entrance examination, and their scores should not be lower than 350. They also need to study French for 500 to 800 hours (at home). After going to France, you usually have to learn French for at least half a year before you can take undergraduate or postgraduate courses.

In France, undergraduate or graduate studies are free, but you need to pay for language learning yourself.

You also mentioned that you want to immigrate in the future. On the whole, I suggest you consider Australia. Australia has a good immigration policy, and it will be easier to immigrate than Singapore.

In Australia, students can work. It is stipulated that they can't work more than 20 hours a week, and there are no restrictions on holidays. The money earned by working is enough for your living expenses during your stay in Australia. Moreover, it is much easier to apply for a university if you go to high school in Australia now than to apply after graduating from high school in China.

Sorry, there are always many things interrupted in the process of replying to you. If there is anything that is not detailed or you still don't understand, please send me a message and ask me!

Wish you success! !