Hamster wrote:ТОЕФЛ резидентам сдавать не надо, но хороший английский вам, конечно, не помешает.
Кто вам такое сказал? Она все равно как иностранка идет потому что у нее и среднее образование и бакалавр будут не американские. Помимо этого, в нормальных университетах спрашивают еще другие экзамены, например если идете на мастера по бизнесу, будьте добры сдать GMAT, в law school LSAT.
TOEFL EXEMPTIONS
Undergraduate - First Time in College and Lower Level Transfers
An international first time in college/lower level transfer student will be exempt from TOEFL if that student meets one of the following conditions:
Has a score of 440 or higher on the verbal section of the SAT exam.
Has a score of 17 or higher for English and a score of 18 or higher for Reading on the ACT exam. TOEFL - Students whose native language is not English must also present a score of at least 550 (paper exam) or 213 (computer exam) on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). The TOEFL requirement may also be waived if the student has attended a U.S. high school or college for at least two years or if the student is a citizen in a country where English is the native language. Countries that Texas Tech considers to have English as the native language include:
Commonwealth Caribbean Countries
Anguilla
Antigua
Bahamas
Barbados
Belize
British Virgin Islands
Bermuda
Cayman Islands
Dominica
Grenada
Guyana
Jamaica
Montserrat
St. Kitts & Nevis
St. Lucia
St. Vincent
Trinidad & Tobago
Turks & Calicos Islands Australia
Canada (except the Province of Quebec)
Ireland
Liberia
New Zealand
United Kingdom
England
Northern Ireland
Scotland
Wales
United States
Is not taking English IV through ESOL (English as a Second Language) at his/her high school.
Is dual enrolled at a university or college and is taking college level English.
Is from an English speaking country.
*NOTE: prospective international and U.S. citizen students whose first language is not English will be exempt from TOEFL if they sat for the British General Certificate Secondary Examination (GCSE) or Caribbean Examination Certificate (CXC).
Undergraduate - Upper Level Transfers
An international upper level transfer student will be exempt from TOEFL if that student meets one of the following conditions:
Took English Composition I and II (or comparable course) at an accredited American university or college and made at least a grade of "C".
Has acquired 60 transferable semester credit hours of college work from an American university or college.
Is employed in the U.S. and is working with English speaking colleagues or customers.
Is from an English speaking country.
*NOTE: Prospective international and U.S. citizen students whose first language is not English will be exempt from TOEFL if they attended a British university in the United Kingdom.
Graduate Students
An international graduate student MAY be exempt from the TOEFL if that student meets one of the following conditions:
Has scored 500 or higher on the GRE Verbal Test
Has earned a college degree at a U.S. institution of higher learning
Has earned a college degree from an institution whose language of instruction is English (must be noted on the transcript).
Is from an English speaking country