<p>What is the process you must do ? Do you need to give the other university your credits from the university you attended ?
Does it include recommendation letters from your professors ?</p>
<p>I will attend Brock University in Canada. But later , I wish to pursue my MA at an American university . The campuses which I consider to attend are : University of Miami , Vanderbilt University , and maybe Notre Dame if neither of those accepts me . </p>
<p>@IsraeliStudent: Based on your several recent threads – not this one alone – it is my opinion that you REALLY need to do some basic, independent research before you ask such fundamental questions; however:
You apply (and the graduate and/or professional schools’ application processes are entirely separate from the undergraduate schools’).
Of course, all the postgraduate schools to which you apply will require your undergraduate transcript(s);
Of course, the application process includes recommendations from Bachelor’s-level professors (and possibly others, as well).
In addition, you must take the applicable standardized test (e.g., GRE for graduate school, GMAT for MBA programs, LSAT for law school, etc.); for your delineated objective, the GREs.
Finally, based on the your scant foregoing information, it appears that your goal is an MA at some US university; however, it is crucial that you understand that you don’t just apply for “general” postgraduate school at institution x; rather, you apply for a highly-specific field of study at that university’s graduate school.</p>
<p>You are worrying about graduate school far too early. You say you are planning to attend Brock university. Welll, in your time there you will have to choose a major and meet professors who will help to direct you to an appropriate graduate program and will provide you with reference letters. You have a long way ahead of you, don’t worry about it now.</p>
<p>Check out the Graduate School Admissions 101 thread - a lot of basic questions are answered there.</p>
<p>And also, if you haven’t yet decided what programs to apply to yet, don’t fixate on specific universities. Vanderbilt or Notre Dame might not even have a program, or a good program, in what you end up wanting a career in.</p>