kianyaleszkovics said:
I am going to stop attending. My credits are good for 3 years so im hoping my paperwork gets approved by then. have you ever heard of anyone going back to their country because they attended school for more then 6 months as a visitor? and also am i still considered a visitor even if my permanent residency paperwork is in process? and also willl they have any reason to deny my third extension.? thanx
i believe that you can do multiple 6 month courses (one after another) but not single course for more duration. (i am not sure about this)
when you enter canada as a visitor, you can stay in Canada for max 6 months
usually (http://www.canadainternational.gc.ca/china-chine/visas/shanghai/faq.aspx?lang=eng#t1)
so you need to leave canada after your six months are over. so while you are in canada and your visitor visa has not expired and you have been in canada about 1 day ago, then you have about 6 months to do anything you want, study, travel, etc.
but if you study is more than 6 months long, then you can only enroll in an institution if you have study permit.
but if you decide to violate the rules and apply to program which is more than 6 months long and doing all this on visitor visa, then your school/college will ask you to provide them the copy of your permit. you will not have that and then school will cancel your admission and report to police and border force. police will take you into custody and deport you.
now, lets assume you have been deported and you are sitting in your home waiting for your PR to enter canada. here is the catch: in all these immigration you are not really given PR right away. actually, you are just given an approval letter. using this letter you need to secure visa from embassy to enter CANADA. PR is only applied after you enter Canada. you cannot just enter Canada on the basis of approval letter, you need a VISA.
so, here is the proble: you are given an approval letter for your immigration application, you take this letter to embassy to get your visa but embassy already knows that you were once deported for violating the laws. now, that embassy based visa officer can and has the right to deny you will on the basis of your criminal record. (remember that deportation)
So, my very important suggestion to you is that don't violate their laws, it will make you criminal in the eyes of the law and it can negatively effect your PR chances.
lets say that you still do all that anyway and you still want PR. you need a very good lawyer who will file suit against VO if you are denied visa. still your chances of winning the suit will be 5% max. and it is gonna cost you buttload of money.
sorry for lengthy answer and redundant writing style.