Current location - Plastic Surgery and Aesthetics Network - Plastic surgery and medical aesthetics - How to study stomatology and go abroad? Which country recognizes academic qualifications?
How to study stomatology and go abroad? Which country recognizes academic qualifications?
In Britain and Australia, at present, it is impossible and impossible for foreign international students who have graduated from high schools to study law and clinical medicine without a permanent residence permit, but it seems that nurses can.

But as long as it's medicine, you must pass a test called UMAT, and then interview foreigners-many people sharpen their heads and crush their heads. Only if you get at least 7.+ in IELTS can you qualify for being more difficult than CET-6 = =, and then wait for the lucky goddess to come and the school will pick you.

Every year, mainland students who are admitted to the British-Australian medical department are as rare as those who go to Princeton.

Because Australian doctors are diamond rice bowls, I have been to an exchange school in Australia for one year. If you want to apply for medical school, high schools have compulsory subjects and high credits. For mainland high school graduates who have no experience in studying abroad, the difficulty is equivalent to enrolling students independently in Peking University = =, and those who study medicine include veterinarians. The annual tuition fee of regular medical schools is about 3WRMB, and the living expenses are at least 8W. I was a high school at that time, so you can't have the energy to work. It's the hardest thing to learn medical business and do your homework in Britain. < P > I won't say it, you know, it's even worse, and it's the most expensive and uneconomical in the world. There are only a few international students admitted every year, and almost all good universities are aristocrats, not from the same world. It's difficult to go to ordinary universities. They don't learn as much as we do in high school, but they are definitely deeper than us-

Why not the United States and Japan? I understand that the education in Japan is second only to some developed English-speaking countries, and most Japanese people are very polite and clean. Except for LS, the quality of education is still very high, and Japanese is very hard to learn. Tokyo is the most prosperous city in the world, with many opportunities. Don't listen to some people's shrimp paste. You are welcome wherever you go as long as you have quality.

American medicine, as you know, our School of Stomatology in Seattle Huada is world-famous. Scholarships are easy to get, too. People like me go back with full prizes < P > It's hard to say for two junior college students. Have you finished your freshman year? Don't take the TOEFL if you haven't taken it. Although there is no requirement for the results of the college entrance examination, if you are under 19 years old, you should take the SAT 1 and SAT 2. If both of them are 22+, and then write a cover letter, you will be fine. If you have received a high school education or above, it will be even more difficult to wait for the postgraduate entrance examination to take TOEFL IELTS.

But studying medicine in these places has a disadvantage. You can't get a license and find a job in the local area unless you stay for 1 years. Most people who study medicine only come back to work as turtles or kelp ivy.

Besides these, there are New Zealand, the Netherlands, Ireland, and Seville (? )。 Although I don't know which of these countries recognizes medical education, they are the first choice for ordinary students to study abroad.

Do developed countries recognize their own medical education? I im pretty sorry, Li Ka-shing Medical College, which is a very good medical school in Britain and America, doesn't accept our undergraduate medical degree, and the general medical school is not good either. The tuition is expensive, the deposit is scary and the gold content is not high. Australia I introduced

Canada earlier-"All medical students in Canada are 4-year doctoral students. Take dalhousie University as an example. Undergraduate students obtain a bachelor's degree in nursing, engineering or biology-related sciences, with a GPA of 3.5 or above (similar to the average score of 85+), and there are entrance examinations."

If you want to go abroad for postgraduate study, your family must be very rich, and then you must be proficient in English, and you will usually get a domestic doctor's license before others will give you a chance. Generally, I went to be a nurse or an anesthesiologist.

Do you want to change your major? You'd better study engineering. Engineering is the best. In the future, I will get a good GRE,TOEFL, and then GPA3.5+, and it will be very interesting to get a good relationship with the teacher. And there is a great possibility of finding a job in the local area.

as for your double major, you can, as long as you are good enough. Discuss with BOSS that you can study four or five majors.

foreign universities are super free.

I don't know if what I said above has hit you, but to tell you the truth, it's a cow who goes abroad to study undergraduate medicine-it's a panda who studies graduate medicine.

Like you, I was born into a medical family, but later I chose my favorite major.

If you are not interested in what you are studying, you can't go on studying, because foreign high schools are different from domestic ones, and there will be no grand scene of falling into class, because all you do is research-oriented work, and you will hang up if you miss listening. I'm a sophomore, and it's easy, because it's computer science, and I know almost everything I have to learn before when I study by myself, plus I've just come into contact with my major. But the graduate school is brightly lit almost every night, and it is common for libraries to be used as dormitories. I'll spend 2 minutes typing this thing for you now. I hope you can stick to your own direction, because you didn't take the college entrance examination this year, and you're not a prospective college student. Maybe it's ok to apply according to the undergraduate standard, but the process may be more than ours. America is really a good place to study medicine. Britain and Australia are too expensive and there are few opportunities for international students. Canada and Singapore are too strict. Japan is also very expensive, second only to British education. However, Chinese can still be seen in our medical college, which is not as crowded as business college.

I still hope to become alumni one day. Work hard.

GRE ,TOEFL is easy to take, and it is almost half a year for those who have passed the college entrance examination.