I have submitted it on 10th March and still the status shows as submitted. I am wondering how long it will take to change the status.
I think we are about the same. I have been at the stage of decision in progress since March 10.MathToStat said:Yes this status has been for one week already...
I think it depends on your age, level of education and language test score.arunkumarsachin said:I have submitted it on 10th March and still the status shows as submitted. I am wondering how long it will take to change the status.
Last year I had a talk with the OINP representatives, and they told that regarding the MA/PhD streams, there is no competition in terms of age, language score etc. That means that if an applicant is eligible, meats all requirements and has all documents prepared properly, he/she will pass. Hopefully, it's true.choip said:I think it depends on your age, level of education and language test score.
Based on the applicants' changing of status this year, it looks like the applicants with higher language test scores are being assessed earlier than others. @Matt, how much did you get on IELTS?natik said:Last year I had a talk with the OINP representatives, and they told that regarding the MA/PhD streams, there is no competition in terms of age, language score etc. That means that if an applicant is eligible, meats all requirements and has all documents prepared properly, he/she will pass. Hopefully, it's true.
I dont think they will assess those with higher language tests first. This will be time consuming on their part as they will have to go through each file to determine those with high language scores. I highly doubt this is the case as it is against logical reasoning.choip said:Based on the applicants' changing of status this year, it looks like the applicants with higher language test scores are being assessed earlier than others. @Matt, how much did you get on IELTS?
Hi,newbutterfly said:I dont think they will assess those with higher language tests first. This will be time consuming on their part as they will have to go through each file to determine those with high language scores. I highly doubt this is the case as it is against logical reasoning.
choip said:Hi,
No, this time, all applicants were requested to enter their language test scores into the form, including each subscores. Therefore, no one has to mannually go through everyone's profile. Their computer system can easily rank applicants in a descending order.
Well, if we think about it. The system is smart enough to rank everyone according to age, level of education and language test score. In this sense, an applicant with a PhD degree will be ranked higher than an applicant with a Master's degree, which is natural. The same logic applies to language test score. I do not think one of the three outranks another. It is likely for each applicant to get a score based on all three of the features. Given that the online system is launched this year and there are more applicants than expected, I would not be surprised if applicants are ranked. Are you a PhD graduate? Would you mind to share your age and language test score?newbutterfly said:You have a point, but I doubt it. My thoughts were that PHD applications would be processed first.
It's my best guess based on the situation. How would you explain that an applicant who submitted an application on Feb 22 has not got into the "assessment" stage, but another applicant who submitted an application on Feb 28 got into the "assessment" stage?natik said:@Choip, I agree with you that the system can rank everybody by many criteria, but why does it need to do? There is no competition, roughly speaking. OINP didn't accept applicants more than their quota. They have only those MAs and PhDs who managed to apply before the quota was reached. It's just simpler for OINP to assess the applications by, for example, first come/first serve criterion or so. Obviously, it has to be adjusted according to the OINP internal workflow. Some officers work faster than others, etc. And I also have some concerns about "the smartness" of the system recalling how extremely hard it was to apply