(09-01-2022, 03:52 PM)ibra999 Wrote: I do not work, I am currently a student, I also happen to live in Syria which is a bit of a hell hole at the moment, and our economy is dead. Canada by far has the easiest route to immigration and tuition fees are relatively reasonable, but it seems like entry to their masters program is more competitive than the U.S as they don't have as many universities as USA
I meant that would having a lot of transfer credits from my the previous university in my bachelor, where I did not do very well (2.4 gpa, decent cs relataed courses grades) affect my chances of admission into a masters program as a transfer credit shows up as a "T" on SNHU transcript. according to the admission department of snhu my gpa resets when I transfer there and if I do well in my last 30 credits that would be my new gpa. It is just a matter of the "T" in my transcript in my 3rd year specifically that is worrying me. I noticed some masters program look at your last 2 years + your gpa.
Graduate programs in Canada are easy to get into as an international student as long as you stick to the Maritimes, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Only universities in Ontario, BC, and Quebec are competitive I'd say. You will have far more difficulty getting a study permit, though. The approval rates are quite low:
https://www.canada.ca/en/immigration-ref...rates.html
And last 2 years means the last 60 credits.



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