An Immigration Course by Course evaluation is the gold standard of evaluations, and includes all aspects of the Standard Course by Course evaluation as well as the education narrative, as required by USCIS for visa approval purposes . An Immigration Course by Course evaluation is required for US visa and immigration applications, and can also be used for continuing education or employment purposes.
A Standard Course by Course evaluation includes all aspects of the General evaluation as well as the list of subjects studied, individual grade conversion into the U.S. grading system, and calculation of both the Grade Point Average (GPA) and post-secondary credits earned. Standard Course by Course evaluations are typically required for any type of continuing education or employment purposes.
Here are a few ways you can approach this interview question that should help you put a smile on the recruiter’s face.
As a business student, I really enjoyed the many management courses I was able to take. I met a lot of great people and learned many skills that I use in my profession.
If you need some extra help preparing for your job interview, we can help!
You might audit if you don't have time to do all the work, the course isn't required, you believe it will be good for graduate school or professional life, or it just interests you.
Colleges and universities do not assign credits for auditing, but the course will show on your transcript as having been audited. If you quit attending, you may receive a "W" for withdrawal.
Most schools require that you get the professor's permission to audit, which she may or may not grant based upon seats available and other considerations. Sometimes department approval is also necessary.
Some professors will let you audit only if you agree to do all or some of the work, even though you won't receive a grade. You must clarify expectations when you get permission.
Because audited courses don't count for credit, auditing may affect both your full-time enrollment status and financial-aid status, if you slip below the required number of credit-bearing courses.