Yes, you can apply for a US Green Card if you are an international student. Lawyers are able to help you to do that. You can also apply for a student Visa depending on your financial status.
Yes you can, regardless of your employment status. But you will be required to start making payment back six months after your graduation or in many cases, six months immediately you stop going to school.
To check the status of your financial aid online you can either see if your college has a link on their website or you can go directly to the fafsa.com website to get this information.
I-130 and I-148 to change to permanent residency and status
Under the current law, the foreign students in F-1 visa are admitted to the country in the D/S (Duration of Status) status. The aliens in these visa categories remain "in status" during the period when they are enrolled in the program. Accordingly, there are no fixed dates of authorized stay and expiration date on I-94. If your F-1 visa expired for a long time, but you are still enrolled in the school program. you may renew the F-1 visa with the help of your college's international student office. As long as you are enrolled as a full time student, you do not need to renew your student visa (even if you are in school for 20 years). But if you are going to travel outside the country, then you will need a valid visa to come back to the US. Ask your International student advisor.
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.
Student status will not exempt you from paying support. However, support is based on a percentage of net income.
F1 status is valid while you are in full time study, once you have completed your course of study you have 60 day grace period to leave the USA. Once you have passsed the 60 day period you are out of status.
Yes, but only good for one year on J1 or F1 visa status. The student can then transfer to a private high school. yogggen@yahoo.com
Child support is strictly from parents for the care of a child. It is not a governmental entitlement, so to speak.
12 months
One of the best resources is a college's financial advisement department. Grants can be issued under various circumstances: ethnicity, socio-economic status, education level, etc. To see what you qualify for check with your college of choice.