How is the process of transferring for most internationals

<p>I posted this in the transfer sub-forum with no luck, but I think it actually belongs here </p>

<p>can someone give a more detailed explanation of transfer process for an international student? or the general process for anybody for that matter? Without getting into the Immigration/legal status part of the process.</p>

<p>basically what I want to one is:</p>

<p>1-what is the first thing you have to do?</p>

<p>2-do you have to notify your current school that you are transferring to another school? if so, what if you are in a community College?</p>

<p>3-will the number of school you apply to transfer be taking into consideration by any particular University? (e.g if you apply to a lot of different school will they think you are not interested in studying with them that much?)</p>

<p>4- If you went to a High School in a foreign country where the speak a language other than English, do you still need to meet the Foreign Language requirement? if so, can you take the AP exam EVEN IF YOU ARE A native speaker of that language? I took 10 years of French in School (but if was in a different country)?, doe that count even if you didn't take the classes in the States? </p>

<p>5- Once you apply, what else do you have to do? do you only need to wait till you hear from them? will they keep in touch with you? or do you have to call them every now and then?</p>

<p>6- Do Transfer students need latter of recommendations? if so, how many is consider the ideal number? if a school don't ask for them you you still need them? the more the better?</p>

<p>7- Are extracurricular activities, taken into consideration for transfer student, or is that only for students who apply as freshmen? there really isn't a whole lot to do here so is really hard to get involved in anything </p>

<p>8- what's the second step after applying?</p>

<p>9- when do you apply? can you apply a year earlies or something like that or do you have to wait till you graduate an get your A.A degree first?</p>

<p>10- if you get accepted into one school, but you are still wait to hear for other schools is it recommendable to turn down the school that accepted you first (if it wasn't you first options, that is) so you can wait to hear from the rest?, if not, then what do most people do in this case?</p>

<p>11- I have about 16 schools in mind that I want to transfer to and at the end of the day it will all come down to the one that will offer me the most aid financially speaking (scholarships awards, etc), should I keep whittling down my list or is it wise to apply to all of them and then see which are the ones who offer me anything and write off those which don't?</p>

<p>12- how does housing on campus work, do you have to wait till you get accepted to apply, or do you apply at the same time you applied to that particular College? if not, after being accepted to a University about how much time does a student has to find on Campus Housing?</p>

<p>13-is the acceptance rate/admission for transfer students is almost the same as those for Freshmen in most Universities? </p>

<p>13-Is transferring to a Tier 3 University, for financial reasons, a bad decision, how will it affect you in the future if you want to get into a Prestigious Grad school (I mean I know an Ivy school is out of the question but what about a top 20 University)?</p>

<p>You need to contact each of the institutions that are on your transfer-to list and ask what their specific requirements are in your case. There may be differences. If you take the time to read through the long thread “Transfer Admissions 101” at the top of the Transfer forum, you will find answers to many of your questions.</p>

<p>If you need financial aid, you will need to apply widely. There is very little aid for international students, and very little aid for transfer students, so you can understand that there is very very little aid for international transfers. Be sure that your apply-to list includes some that you can afford without financial aid.</p>

<p>Students get into Top Graduate Schools every year from colleges and universities that you and I have never heard of. They do this by performing well in their classes, earning the respect of the professors who will write the letters of recommendation, taking advantage of learning/internship/publication opportunities, performing well on the GRE, and writing bang-up statements of purpose. If you are clear with yourself about the amount of dedication that would be required to turn yourself into that kind of candidate, you can do it.</p>