mina_888 said:
i don`t know the way to go to Quebec to study french
is it available easy ??
how i can do this ??
and what is the cost of studying french in Quebec ???
In order for your time studying to give you 5 points for a stay in Quebec, you would need to take 12 credits at a university during an entire term. (12 credits is full-time.) 5 points for:
Séjour à des fins d’études si l’étude a constitué sa principale
activité pendant au moins une session régulière à temps plein
Les cours de langues suivis dans un établissement d’enseignement
postsecondaire reconnu par le MELS ou dans une université peuvent
permettre d’allouer des points pour un séjour à des fins d’études, si le but
principal du séjour a été l’étude. En contrepartie, les cours de langues suivis
dans des instituts privés ne peuvent être considérés comme un séjour à des
fins d’études et sont évalués comme « autre séjour »
Source: http://www2.publicationsduquebec.gouv.qc.ca/dynamicSearch/telecharge.php?type=7&file=GPI-3-1.pdf
At Laval University, this would cost about $7,000 in fees and $4,000 in living expenses:
http://www.elul.ulaval.ca/nos-cours/francais-langue-etrangere/cours-de-15-semaines/couts/
http://www.elul.ulaval.ca/fileadmin/elul/fichiers/nos-cours/francais-langue-etrangere/cours-15_sem/couts/Tarifs_FLE_frn_A_2013.pdf
It would probably be similar at other universities.
In this kind of full-time program, if you have a study permit then you will be legally eligible for on-campus employment. You could find out whether the university you'd be interested in could offer this.
Another option would be to begin studying for a master's degree (e.g., in chemistry) from a Quebec university (1.5 years). The tuition would be about $12,000/year for a foreign student. After six months of studies, you would be eligible for an off-campus work permit.
There is a rule that says that if you are in a bachelor's program and are taking certain French courses, then you can be exempted from the fees for foreign students for those credits. So for example, you could register for a bachelor's degree in French as a second language, and you would pay low tuition (like a Quebec student), but only for the eligible French courses. After staying for one term, you would get your five points. Tuition would be about $1,500 per term if you were able to fill your entire schedule with eligible French courses.
http://www.mcgill.ca/legaldocuments/fr/exemption (See no. 5)
http://www.flsh.ulaval.ca/index.php?id=347
http://www2.ulaval.ca/les-etudes/programmes/repertoire/details/baccalaureat-en-francais-langue-seconde-ba.html
So in this case, you would have to pretend to the university that you wanted to do an entire degree in French, but you could stop after one term.