International group or domestic..?

<p>International group or domestic..?</p>

<p>My child immigrated from Korea when she was 2-year old, with a permanent residential(green card). She has dual status - legally Korean citizen, but cultivated in America for more than 10 years. </p>

<p>I have heard that many boarding schools strongly maintain their own limitation policies for numbers of international students and I respect that. I am seeing an big increase in applications from Korea this year. And if my child is assessed in an international student category, her competition rate will be higher than when treated as a domestic. Please let me know which category she will be in. </p>

<p>He is applying for only Tabor and NMH. I asked NMH when interviewed and they did not answer yet.</p>

<p>It depends on the school if they will consider her int'l or domestic.</p>

<p>i personally think she will be domestic because she holds a US address. however, since she is a Korean citizen, she can be viewed as an int'l student who lives in the US. I am not sure, you have to ask the schools.</p>

<p>i think domestic.
im in the same situation, exactly.
i immigrated from korea, well actually in the 3rd grade, but have been living here since.
i think as long as they know that your daughter received education in America, she will be considered domestic.</p>

<p>you live in america, you are considered domestic</p>

<p>you are where you live</p>

<p>^ no, it's not.</p>

<p>Definitely, definitely apply with domestic. Tabor and NMH are especially competitive for Korean students. It will be much more advantageous to your son to apply within a domestic pool. Korean students have crazy stats, and there is generally a limitation to a number of internationals the school can accept.</p>