ravish02 said:There are 2 options
1. If I go for CAIPS note it will take another 1 month and I need to defer my SEP-2016 intake, refund my GIC and reapply again according to caips note.
2. I can explain all the refusal points well and make then convince. My previous SOP was only of 1 page- this might be the reason for not understanding my case.
what is ur take on this. ??
Hey,
You are ok to write a longer SOP. Many of our members might disagree with a longer SOP but I have some logic for it.
Firstly, when you have a rejection, you NEED to address all the reasons of the rejection in your SOP and let them know why they were WRONG in rejecting your earlier application.
Secondly, you also need to write the answers to the generic CIC questions such as "why canada?" "why this course" "why this university" "How will this course benefit your" etc. etc.
So It can always become more than 1 page.
Also, It would be good to put a separate cover letter on your letter of explanation, stating which numbered documents are for which backlogs.
I would also advise you to state in the very first few lines of your SOP that your statement is longer than the recommended 1 page because you needed to address the issues of the rejection and 1 page could not suffice.
However, try to bring it within 2 pages, you can use narrow margins or a bit smaller font to do that. The VO when he/she sees that the statement is 3 pages, might then feel uncomfortable to read through the whole thing. At the end of the day, you are at their mercy.
If you go for an appeal, it will go into judiciary review, you might actually get the decision reversed but after that your application will be treated as a new submission and it will take the same time as a new submission.
Hope this helps.