<p>hey, i have a quesiton for all of you guys on the board. i don't know if this is a dumb question, but i figured asking wouldn't hurt. i am considering mcGill for my undergrad, and from the united states. however, does that mean that when i apply for graduate school in the united states that i will be considered an international student? does anyone have experience applying from mcGill to graduate schools within the US, and could you share that with me? thanks a lot. :)</p>
<p>Id think not. My understanding was that international student status is for people whose citizenships are not of the country to which they are applying. They might not be eligible for certain aid packets or be subject to a different entrance requirement/tuition fee. </p>
<p>You would just have to put down that for your education you were educated in McGill. </p>
<p>I'm planning on doing this same thing. :)</p>
<p>Are you a US citizen? if you are, then your citizenship will cause you not to be an international applicant, and your state of residence will either be the state your permanent address is located in (IE, where you reside in the states, or where your family lives), or your last state of residence. I'm fairly confident about that...</p>
<p>And I've heard some success stories about students getting into top US grad schools from McGill :) if that encourages you.</p>
<p>noelle</p>