<p>i actually read somewhere that out of the internationals, canadian students make up the largest student body with about 500 of them. then i heard its the korean students, with about 300 in total.</p>
<p>kims, where's AIC? =S
me no kno what you talk about.
ya sorry. i have no idea what AIC is =/</p>
<p>ya there are helluva lot of canadian students.</p>
<p>tun --
can you tell me about korean church there/korean christian student body?</p>
<p>hiiii!!! haha koreann pride guyss yeayuhhhh loll...im nervouss guys,=.. jinjarohh...if we get in, we shoould alll meet up at cornelll and hold a meeting like alll the cornell krn ccers gatherrr!! haha and just like go out to a nice korean restaurant around ithaca ...mayb im dreaming but itd be nice ey? hahahaha i really hope i get in!! hananimmm juh gah shuh jal hal gae yo!!!
aja aja hwaitinggg everybodyyyy!!! </p>
<p>be happayy =)</p>
<p>
My year has about 7-10 Koreans/Korean Americans including transfers. There aren't that many undergraduate Asians in ILR. Most Asians you see will be grad students. I remember in my freshman year, there were actually more incoming black students than asian students, with latinos right behind. That's one demographic occurrence that you won't see too often.</p>
<p>Haha, everyone try [url=<a href="http://www.cornellkorea.com?%5DCornellkorea.com%5B/url">http://www.cornellkorea.com?]Cornellkorea.com[/url</a>]
And do you guys know that there are some "Korean Cornell Freshmen Welcome Meetings" (or something like U-hak student meetings) in Korea during summer among Korean International students? I hope to go there and see you guys all next summer in Korea! Yeah, good luck everyone!</p>
<p>omg this website is prettty sweet yunacamel!
something to keep me busy for a while.</p>
<p>
In terms of church service, you have three choices pretty much.
1) Protestant - English service
2) Protestant - Korean service
3) Catholic - Korean service
I'm actually not too sure about the Catholic one, but I know it's predominantly Korean international students, so it's more of a de facto Korean language service. I could be wrong.</p>
<p>I'd say most of the Korean American population is Christian. I'm one of the few that isn't. Which at first, made it a little harder for me to meet some other KA's because there wasn't a natural/typical meeting place such as the church for me to meet them. I assume you are Christian, so that shouldn't be a problem for you. The Korean international population is probably more of a 50/50 split. Basically, Cornell should provide you what you're looking for in a Korean Christian community.</p>
<p>Tun, then is it hard to make Korean friends at Cornell if you're not a Christian?
My entire family/relatives are Christians but I don't consider myself so...
I'd still definitely love to make a lot of Korean and non-Korean friends at college.</p>
<p>wow so many Koreans for Cornell...
I'm applying for Cornell in the regular decisions!</p>
<p>ayy
then what skul do u go to eriku
AIC is this skul in town where loads of ppl apply to US</p>
<p>haha where is AIC.. which town? 'cause i live in toronto, ontario, canada and i go to this small but good private school. wait so where do you live kims?</p>
<p>i probably got rejected. getting ready for major disappointment. doesn't help that i'm going through a dilemma with my app....less than 24 hours before the revelation. wow. i'm screweed.</p>
<p>
No, not at all. But if you're non-Christian and ILR, you'll have to work a little harder like I did. :) I highly encourage you to take one of the Korean language courses to meet other Koreans. As long as you can speak some Korean, you should be able to place into one of the classes that's geared towards native speakers.</p>
<p>Haha, I applied for CAS and my native language is Korean so I won't have any problem talking to Korean students. I'm thinking of taking Chinese at college by the way... Thank you for the reply!</p>
<p>Accept100// I am a dual US-Korean citizenship and a Canadian PR card holder... I don't think I'm a Korean-Canadian. I'm probably more like Korean-American if I was less fobby xD</p>
<p>oh my bad -_-;; i am living in NZ atm and AIC is this school in new zealand lol</p>
<p>oh haha. oh question, if you do get in, when would you start at Cornell? since you know.. in nz you end in december. </p>
<p>='( i miss christchurch...</p>
<p>Classes start in late August... around the last week of summer.</p>
<p>if i get in anywhere in the US and decide to attend I'll probably goto Auckland Uni for a semester (it starts in march) and then get ther by august? lol</p>
<p>kims107// You probably don't want to tell that to anyone, including any college...
I heard that a lot of Koreans from Korea go to a university in Korea for a semester and then go to colleges in the US...because the Korean school year begins in March and basically those Korean students have nothing to do until late August after they graduate high schools in February.</p>