Free AdviceGet Free Advice
Home | Get advice | Give advice | Topics | Columnists | - !START HERE! -
Make Suggestions | Sitemap

Get Advice


Search Questions

Ask A Question

Browse Advice Columnists

Search Advice Columnists

Chat Room

Give Advice

View Questions
Search Questions
Advice Topics

Login

Username:
Password:
Remember me
Register for free!
Lost Password?

Want to give Advice?

Sign Up Now
(It's FREE!)

Miscellaneous

Shirts and Stuff
Page Backgrounds
Make Suggestions
Site News
Link To Us
About Us
Terms of Service
Help/FAQ
Sitemap
Contact Us


I want to become a exchange student, how do I do it?


Question Posted Wednesday June 25 2014, 4:43 pm

I am Canadian and I want to become a exchange student. I want to go to either 1) United States (preferably L.A., New York, Boston) 2)Europe (England, perhaps France) 3) Australia. I want to go for maybe a whole school year. My parents suggest I go to the school guidance counselor to ask what places they recommend and how it works as soon as school starts which I will. Though what is the process of becoming a exchange student, the criteria needed? are the hosting families thoroughly checked out? also is it likely I get to choose where I want to go? I do a lot of research and I don't know if their is many who will send me from canada to the United States. The US is my first option, which companies send me to US? thanks

[ Answer this question ]
Want to answer more questions in the Work & School category?
Maybe give some free advice about: School?


Razhie answered Thursday June 26 2014, 6:14 am:
Talking to your guidance counsellor is the right place to start.

There are many different programs, run by many different groups, with different policies and procedures. The criteria will be different from organization to organization, and even country to country. Some will actually require a 'trade' where you family allows a student to come into their home as well, others will be more of a pay-to-play situation, where there is cost to you to go.

I doubt there are too many Canada/US exchange programs. Exchanges are costly. Without a scholarship, you should expect it to cost at least $8,000 to attend a school in another country, and some places will be much more. Since it's so simple for Canadians and Americans to travel across our shared boarder and we have so much access to one another's culture, I doubt there is much drive to create scholarships or subsidized programs for Canadian/American exchanges. Your guidance counsellor is certainly your first stop.

[ Razhie's advice column | Ask Razhie A Question
]


More Questions:

<<< Previous Question: atheists
Next Question >>> can I get pregnant?

Recent popular questions:
Want to give advice?

Click here to start your own advice column!

What happened here with my gamer friends?

All content on this page posted by members of advicenators.com is the responsibility those individual members. Other content © 2003-2014 advicenators.com. We do not promise accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any advice and are not responsible for content.

Attention: NOTHING on this site may be reproduced in any fashion whatsoever without explicit consent (in writing) of the owner of said material, unless otherwise stated on the page where the content originated. Search engines are free to index and cache our content.
Users who post their account names or personal information in their questions have no expectation of privacy beyond that point for anything they disclose. Questions are otherwise considered anonymous to the general public.

[Valid RSS] eXTReMe Tracker