u/Alternative_Drop302

▲ 1 r/USCIS

Struggling With My I-601A Hardship Statement — Advice Appreciated

Hi everyone, I’m currently writing my personal statement in support of my husband’s I-601A waiver and I’m honestly struggling with knowing if I’m being specific enough. I currently have about 3 pages written. We do not have children, so my lawyer advised me to focus heavily on the hardship to me personally.

For anyone with an approved I-601A and no kids involved, what kinds of hardships did you focus on most? Emotional, financial, mental health, future stability, dependence on your spouse, daily routines, safety concerns, etc.?

I’m worried my statement sounds too general and not detailed enough. Any tips on how specific you got or examples of what helped strengthen your case would really help. Thank you.

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u/Alternative_Drop302 — 6 days ago
▲ 3 r/bcba

Hi everyone,
I work for a company that offers tuition reimbursement, and I’m getting ready to start my master’s in Applied Behavior Analysis next year but I’m preparing myself for the workload and financially.

The schools they cover are:
University of Maryland Global Campus, Chamberlain University, Capella University, Strayer University, National University, Thomas Edison State University, University of Phoenix, ECPI University, Liberty University, Walden University, and University of Arizona Global Campus.

I’m trying to figure out which program would actually be the best fit while I’m working full-time, and I’d really appreciate hearing real experiences from people who’ve attended any of these schools.

How easy it is to get in touch with advisors, counselors, and professors

How responsive student support is when you need help?

Whether professors are involved and helpful, or if it feels mostly self-paced

Any feedback good or bad would really help me decide.
Thank you so much!

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u/Alternative_Drop302 — 19 days ago
▲ 1 r/bcba

Hi everyone! I’m planning to start my Master’s in ABA next year with the goal of becoming a BCBA.

I’d love to hear from those who are already in the field or currently in a program what are some things you wish you knew before starting?

Any tips on:

- Choosing the right program

- Managing school + work (I’ll likely be working part-time/full-time haven’t decided yet )

-Getting fieldwork hours

-Avoiding burnout

-Study habits or exam prep

Also, if you could go back, what would you do differently?

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u/Alternative_Drop302 — 26 days ago