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新西兰个人入学留学申请书【精选3篇】

新西兰相比欧美和其他英联邦国家来说便宜很多,物价水平也和中国比较接近,用较少的投资即可获得较高的教育质量回报。更多新西兰个人入学留学申请书请点击“个人留学”查看。

新西兰留学奖学金的申请程序

1、奖学金申请资格

学生在奖学金申请时,有清晰的标准和要求,申请者要满足所有要求。如果申请人不确定自己是否符合奖学金的所有标准,请联系学校相关部门对申请人的情况进行审核。

2、申请多项奖学金

申请人可以同时申请多项奖学金,单每个项目需要单独填写申请表格。

3、尽早递交申请

奖学金竞争激烈,所以一旦决定在新西兰学习,就应该开始准备申请奖学金的相关要求,收集申请奖学金所需的所有文件需要准备的条件比较多,申请人提前看好所需要的材料,避免在递交申请的时候因为材料不全耽误时间。

4、申请材料

申请人会被要求在奖学金申请中提供大量详细信息,这可能包括有关申请人的学习计划,学业成绩,财务状况,学习领域和裁判的信息。在发送申请之前,务必仔细检查以确保没有遗漏任何内容。

5、提供认证副本

一些奖学金要求提供学术信息或其他文件的“经过认证的副本”。经认证的副本必须由法律授权的人在申请人所在国家/地区的法定声明上盖章或签署为原件的真实副本。在新西兰,可以找括律师和太平绅士为申请人的材料盖章确认真实性。

6、校对申请

在递交之前,可以找其他人帮忙校对,避免信息上的错误,反复检查后递交准备的信息。

7、等待结果

申请人在递交奖学金申请后,需要等待一段时间才能得到的申请是否成功的消息。

新西兰个人入学留学申请书

Dear _,

For example, you may choose to write on a social issue

about which you are passionate, an experience that has greatly influencedyour life or taught you a valuable lesson, or about a challenge you haveovercome. These are only suggestions, however; the choice of topic is yours.

"Saudi Arabia? That''s a country Daddy? Where is it? Is it going to be likeit is here? Are there going to be playgrounds and ice cream?"

Those were just a few of the thoughts that began circulating through myseven- year old mind. I was born in upstate New York and raised in Maryland, yetof Lebanese origin. Out of nowhere, I learned that I would soon have to leave myfriends and the only place I had ever known existed; it turned my world upsidedown. I was just like any other seven-year old girl; obsessed with Barbies,playing dress-up with my mother''s clothes and jauntily leading a carefree life.I was a very curious young child, always feeling the need to know somethingabout everything. I was outgoing and sometimes a bit obnoxious, but then againwho wasn''t at the age of seven? Soon after I learned of our move to SaudiArabia, everything changed.

I arrived in Saudi Arabia and experienced extreme culture shock. I learnedthat in public, women have to be covered from head to toe by wearing what theSaudis call an "abaya", which is a black cloak or gown that completely coversthe female body. Women are not allowed to drive, work, or closely interact withmen, and the weather is unbearably hot 11 months a year. The people spoke alanguage unfathomable to me and I was on the verge of a breakdown. In thisstrange, new country, I felt like a completely different person. I knewabsolutely no one. I went from being a happy, outgoing little girl to a girlwith no friends and no knowledge of anything around her, which of course was acompletely alien experience for me. What could Saudi Arabia possibly offer me?Was I ever going to learn to tolerate the vastly contrasting culture andlifestyle? The moment I saw the endless cascading mounds of sand and barrenearth, I was convinced that there was no way I was ever going to make friendswith people who were at home in this desolate and backwards country, whononetheless spoke a language completely foreign to me. I remember cryingeveryday, begging my parents to take me back home; a place where I was perfectlyhappy with everything and never complained. Soon enough however, I was placed inan American school in the middle of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Over the years, I metpeople who had also just moved from their countries and we all turned to eachother to share our thoughts and experiences in our new "home." Up until theninth grade, I remained a shy and reserved individual, as there wasn''t much fora young girl to do in a strict and religious country like Saudi Arabia; or so Ithought. It was not until my freshman year that I broke out of my tiny,introverted bubble and began taking an active role in my school surroundings. Ibegan getting myself involved in competitive school team sports such asbasketball and soccer; went on an international study trip with the school toSwitzerland and traveled around the kingdom as a member of Saudi Arabia''sAll-Kingdom Band playing the trombone with proud fluency. I even managed toacquire the country''s native language, Arabic, and began to learn more about myreligion - Islam. I soon established friendships with individuals from variouscountries such as Canada, Egypt, Jordan, United States of America, South Africa,Brazil and Pakistan, just to name a few. The people helped me adjust to thecountry, despite its desert-like climate and strict rules. Over time, we sharedaspects of our cultures and traditions, in addition to realizing that we allhave our similarities and differences. We developed a profound tolerance andrespect for the country we were currently living in. I soon realized that therelationships I had developed in this country were the friendships that I wouldvalue and cherish the most in the future. All of us being foreigners in SaudiArabia led us to come closer together and to confide in one another. I wasslowly becoming my younger self again; outgoing, active and most importantly,happy. Looking back at my experience in Saudi Arabia, I have become aware ofwhat the country has offered me and I find myself taking back the feelings ofresentment that I had towards my parents for moving to this country, as well asthe harsh feelings I first developed towards the country itself.

After living in Saudi Arabia for approximately eleven years, I am happy tosay that I have thoroughly enjoyed my experience in the country, and haverealized that during my years in Saudi Arabia, I have had a unique opportunityto live overseas and meet people from different backgrounds, religions, andcultures. As a guest in the country, I have learned that Saudi Arabia hasoffered me the opportunity to experience a culture that is different from my ownin many ways, and this opportunity has allowed me to be open and to accept andtolerate different perspectives, traditions and beliefs. My exposure to thesedifferent nationalities in Saudi Arabia has built on my foundations of culturalawareness, rather than laying the cornerstone for it. I now see Saudi Arabia ina completely different light than when I had first moved to the country. I nolonger see it as a country that is part of the world, but a country that hasbrought the world to me.

Yours sincerely,

bzuowen

新西兰留学申请材料一览

1、学术材料

先要出示的就是自己的学历和成绩单,前者是大家完成阶段性的学习之后,官方出示的结业证明,只要顺利通过考核,就会自动获取,可以先由学校开临时证明,后续补交完整材料。

然后是大家的考试平均成绩单,要准备的是大家每一学年期终考核的分数成绩,这部分材料展示的是大家在专业学习中的表现,是需要有比较优秀的分数的,而且要有学校盖章认证。

2、语言材料

学生在国内虽然有英语学习的基础,但是大家参加的国内的考试,四六级或者专四专八成绩是不具备有国际性的,成绩不受认可,所以大家必须要参加的是标准化的考试如IELTS或者TOEFL。

每个月都会开展多次考试,大家可以自由报名确认时间,名额一般是比较充足的,参加考试后分数一般一周就能出来,正式的成绩单会在半个月内发放,大家直接提交这份材料即可。

3、文书材料

CV是个人情况的概述,要言简意赅的进行陈述,将基本情况交代清楚;CV是大家专业表现和综合技能的展示,是需要有一定的内容支持的,所以要围绕自己的优势来进行写作。

推荐信是他人的评价,要客观而且真实,推荐人在专业领域有一定的地位;艺术类的申请者还需要准备好作品集,这是考核的重中之重,要按要求展示自己的实力。

4、申请表格

虽然大家在线上提交了自己的申请表,但是在线上提交的材料中,也需要有这份表格,来方便审核的工作人员,将申请者进行定位,不会遗漏或者弄错大家的申请。

在线上填好了申请表之后,可以直接打印下来,最后手写签上自己的名字就可以了。

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