SenoritaBella
VIP Member
- Jan 2, 2012
- 194
- Category........
- Visa Office......
- Dakar
- Job Offer........
- Pre-Assessed..
- App. Filed.......
- 08-01-2014
- AOR Received.
- 12-02-2014
- File Transfer...
- 25-02-2014
- Med's Request
- 02-11-2015
- Med's Done....
- 18-09-2013
- Passport Req..
- 02-11-2015
- VISA ISSUED...
- hopefully soon
- LANDED..........
- hopefully soon
Must be different in different provinces. At my test, all the binders were blue(if memory serves me well) and I assumed we wrote the same test. However, after the test I heard someone asking another what their answer was for a particular question and I realized there were different versions b/c I did not have that question.
Also, all the test notices the day I wrote were white and so were the oath notices (they were placed on a table). The only difference I saw was the color of the marker over the 3 digit number on the oath notice - some people's had pink highlight and others yellow.
Also, all the test notices the day I wrote were white and so were the oath notices (they were placed on a table). The only difference I saw was the color of the marker over the 3 digit number on the oath notice - some people's had pink highlight and others yellow.
swindsor2010 said:Absolutely not.
- Different colors of "tests" during the test day:
Obviously because they hand out different versions of the citizenship test to avoid cheating. It's just easier for them to control it by color. They never give "Red" to two people sitting next to each other because all tests in "Red" are the same.
- Different colors of "documents" you receive in the mail during your citizenship application:
Same thing. They handle thousands of applications per year. They print different "forms" in different "colors" just to make it easier and faster for them to send documents out. They get a chart that says: If you need to send an applicant notice to come to test, include form "Red, Green and Blue" for exemple.
- The colors have nothing do to with when a person will get oath
Sources:
- Been there, done that... (as a citizenship applicant)
- Basic observation
- Basic common sense.