No, if you are a permanent resident in the US, you are treated like an American citizen in terms of colleges and universities.
A domestic student is a student who is a citizen or a resident of the country where they are studying. For example, in the United States, a domestic student would be someone who is a citizen or a permanent resident of the United States.
Yes
I have never had a student who received Federal or State financial aid. You must be either an American citizen or permanent resident. However, an international student should contact the Financial Aid office of the college or university they are attending and ask for any scholarship information particular to international students. Viper1
A UK student is someone who lives and holds British residency whereas an international student who is a person not normally resident in the UK and who's normally a resident of another country that does not form or is part of Scotland, England, Wales or Northern Ireland. (UK).
Yes I work at the financial aid office a college. If you are a permanent resident you can apply for the FAFSA and you get get loans and scholarships through that. It is a free application. Don't be fooled by fake web sites.
It is definitely possible. Because colleges value diversity (or at least say they do), an international student is a special asset to any college campus. The applications for American schools typically require a student to be a permanent legal resident of the U.S., however. This would mean that an international student would first have to move to the U.S. and obtain permanent legal resident status. Also, as with any college, U.S. colleges are very competitive. Therefore, just being an international student is not enough to gain one admission. They might not look too hard at a high school transcript because France's education system is different, but one would need test scores, essays, and other documentation that provides evidence that he or she would make a good student.
the answer is NO, to cosign a loan you have to be a US citizen or Permanent Resident. in most cases applicant must have SSN and be a PR in the united stated to cosign
If the student continues to maintain his residence in CA (presumably his parent's home) and takes no action to become a permanent resident of NE, he may keep his CA license plates. However, if the the student takes action to establish himself as a resident of NE (buys property, pays taxes, etc) he may be considered a legitimate NE resident and required to register his car in his new state of residence.
A student that is a student.
There are a few particular circumstances where international students are in fact eligible to receive financial aid and scholarships through the United States government and the University, respectively. In general, to be eligible for federal financial aid, as well as scholarships at the University, a student must be a citizen of the United States, a U.S. National (including natives of American Samoa or Swain's Island), a U.S. Permanent Resident, Texas State Resident, or an eligible non-citizen.
A refugee claimant cannot. A convention refugee , once he/she is a permanent resident and hes calculated that they meet the residencyt requirment, then yes.
I-130 and I-148 to change to permanent residency and status