dimanche 20 mars 2016

Provisions of the in State Tuition Guildlines

Quote:


If you speak of my comment about U of M charging students out of state tuition even after their first year. I was speaking of out of state students being unable to create residency by their mere presence in the state. 1- In general you can become a resident of a state by living in it for some amount of time, but U of M does not recognize that for tuition perposes. They set the rules. They state that quite clearly in their guidelines.

Once again, just because you tell the university he came to Michigan to reunite with Mom, and not just to go to school, does NOT make him a resident of the state.

"b. Circumstances that do not demonstrate permanent Michigan residence

2- you sign a statement of intent to be domiciled in Michigan."

"To qualify for in-state tuition at the University of Michigan on the basis of being a Michigan resident, you must establish that Michigan is your permanent legal residence. In other words, you must establish that the State of Michigan is your home and that you intend to remain in the State permanently. This will depend on, 3- among other things, where you live, work, and attend school; where you have lived, worked, and attended school; 4- where your parents or guardians live; and other evidence that you intend to make Michigan your permanent home."

You failed to convince the university that your Michigan is your son's home and that he intends to remain permantely in the state.

As much as I have enjoyed this debate, I am tired to going in circles with someone who will not see reason.

Please refer to the red font part.

1.The provisions do not clearly specify how long one should live in the state in order to become the resident.

2.There is the fact as stated before presented with evidence to the RCO, not only just making statement.

3.There is other things.

4. The dependent student's mom holds permanent job and lives in the state.

Many Thanks for your help.

I still need do not see the provisions can clearly provide the conclusion about this as yours.

Or they do not clearly tell you how one can be or can not be classified as the resident.

They might be intended to be written in such a way, vague one.

I wonder if anyone tell me that how a student , who is required by the provisions to submit a in state tuition application, can be classified as the resident .


Provisions of the in State Tuition Guildlines

Aucun commentaire:

Enregistrer un commentaire