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Study In Norway

Samantha Said:

What can I expect if I study abroad in Norway?

We Answered:

I've lived in Norway all my life :) Luckily, about 95% of its citizens speak English, even kids at age 10 can easily carry a conversation in English. Be prepared to spend more money though, as things are very pricey as compared to America. People are also very friendly. We walk more than drive. In addition one of the biggest differences people from America notice here are the portion sizes in the food. Things aren't so deep fried and fattening either. Good thing that keeps us all fit :)

Kathleen Said:

where can i get a full information about study in norway free of charge?

We Answered:

try these sites:

http://lanekassen.no/Toppmeny/Languages/…
http://web.mit.edu/cdemello/www/no.html

Heidi Said:

Where would you like to study. Norway or finland?

We Answered:

Well I'm not going to study in either, but I live in Norway and have never ever heard anything good about coming here to study.

Nicole Said:

how much does it cost to study in norway for foreign student?

We Answered:

Depends. Are you in college (or doing to collge there) or not? If sothere's tuition to consider and the stanard of living....

Seth Said:

Can I study in Norway/Sweden without speaking Norwegian/Swedish?

We Answered:

it's fine if u don't know their language, since people usually speak very good english there. the environment will make u start to pick up and learn their language naturally though. i don't think it's that hard to learn. swedish is my third language and English is my second, and i find swedish easier

Sergio Said:

Can i study in Norway ?How much will cost it?

We Answered:

There is no tuition for public universities (most are public), though you pay for books and a semester fee up to 600 NOK (~150 BGN). You must pay your own living costs, which are very high in Norway.
http://studyinnorway.no/sn/Tuition-Schol…

If you plan to study in Norway, but not work, you just register your stay within 3 months of arriving.
http://www.udi.no/Norwegian-Directorate-…

If you plan to work at all, I believe you have to fulfill the requirements listed in your other question and apply for a permit (check with UDI to be certain, I'm not used to the transitional rules for Bulgaria). After 12 months, you no longer need a permit, just to register like other EEA citizens. For this reason, it might be easiest to work or be an au pair for a year. One good thing about being an au pair, is that your host family must pay for language courses up to 6000 NOK/year (the courses are expensive!). After that year, you should be able to study and work at the same time without problem.

You could also learn Norwegian in Bulgaria:
http://studyinnorway.no/sn/Norwegian-lan…

Most students live in collectives with other people (a private bedroom but everything else is shared), or rent a hybel (one-room flat, sometimes with shared bathrooms or laundry). Prices range 2500-5000 NOK for a collective (bofelleskap), and 3500-6500 for a hybel. Food is very expensive here, budget up to 2000 NOK/month.

You can search in English on Hybel.no, but most ads are in Norwegian. Google Translate makes them readable.
http://www.hybel.no/

Finn.no doesn't have search options in English. Here are results limited to bofelleskap/hybel:
http://www.finn.no/finn/realestate/letti…

Here is a web site to help with language:
http://norwegianlanguage.info/resource/l…

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