I agree with everyone else. I would strongly recommend you return home and apply from there. Your chances of being approved while in Canada are very low.Hello everyone,
I came to Canada as a visitor in sept 2017 along with my wife and son.
My wife liked Canada and wants to study here. So i searched for colleges and found out a college in Montreal and took admission in one year program starting in feb 2018. Have applied for caq aswell.
Now my question is how to apply for study permit after caq is received. I read at cic website that we can convert visitor to study permit if pre requisite course is completed which is required for admission into actual course.
Please guide me with the next procedure.
My wife has done masters in technology computer science from India and has 7.5 bands in ielts with 6.5 in one module. She got admission in a relevant course.
Please guide me. I have around 25days to wait for caq. Till then i have to gather all the information.
Thank you.
To be approved, you must demonstrate that you have strong ties to your home country and have no plans on remaining in Canada long term. If your entire family is already in Canada as visitors and has been here for at least a month - this demonstrates that you effectively have no real ties to your home country. Additionally, applying for a one year college program after a Masters makes for a very weak study permit application and makes it pretty obvious she's not a genuine student but is just looking for a way to allow your family to remain in Canada. If your wife was applying for a PhD or a Masters from one of Canada's top universities (e.g. U of T, Waterloo, etc.) - then I would say you have a chance of being approved while in Canada. However with just a college program and your entire family already here - I believe a refusal is guaranteed.
Of course it's ultimately your choice.