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Written or Spoken Exam?

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Hello Everyone,

This is my first time in this board. Some may know me from the K-1 forum from 05-06 and onwards to AOS 06-07.

I intend on applying for citizenship if everything goes A-OK with getting perminent residency and just wanted to get some general knowledge.

I've been practising since K-1 and teaching myself about American History so it's not too new to me but what I wondered was...

Is this going to be a written examination or spoken? I always assumed spoken interview where you're asked 10 or more questions related to America depending on how many you got correct etc. But a family member of my SO is telling me it's BOTH written and spoken and the written part is huge. She's never taken the exam as she's a born US Citizen but worked in the country I cam from for a while and came back to the US. I'm not sure what to believe is right.

Can anybody shed any light?

Fiona & Andrew

Love hurts

When you live an ocean away

When you change your sleep schedule to catch a few more moments

When you really need to be held and you have to imagine whilst your partner describes it

When you constantly refresh the USCIS website to see if you're getting any closer

Love Loves

When it repays you with the love of your life

When God finally answered your biggest prayer

When you can live life again in the real world but still have that eternal connection

When you wake up for to the beginning of the rest of your life with the person you fought so hard for

When you love somebody that much

You'll do anything

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Hello Everyone,

This is my first time in this board. Some may know me from the K-1 forum from 05-06 and onwards to AOS 06-07.

I intend on applying for citizenship if everything goes A-OK with getting perminent residency and just wanted to get some general knowledge.

I've been practising since K-1 and teaching myself about American History so it's not too new to me but what I wondered was...

Is this going to be a written examination or spoken? I always assumed spoken interview where you're asked 10 or more questions related to America depending on how many you got correct etc. But a family member of my SO is telling me it's BOTH written and spoken and the written part is huge. She's never taken the exam as she's a born US Citizen but worked in the country I cam from for a while and came back to the US. I'm not sure what to believe is right.

Can anybody shed any light?

Fiona & Andrew

At the moment it is an oral exam with some written thrown in depending on who interviews you (and your level of English, I think). The written is a simple test of writing a few sentences. I wouldn't worry too much about swotting up so early. They are planning to change the test, and who knows if it will change again by the time you're ready to file.

Met the ole man in January 1998

Jan. 2004: K1 visa issued ~ April 2004: Got on a plane ~ Nov. 2004: GC in my mucky hands ~ Dec. 2006: Received 10 YR GC

September 2008 - US passport delivered!

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Colombia
Timeline

My sister took the pilot test last week here in Denver which consists of 142 new questions. All they did was ask her 10 questions and she had to get 6 correct. Then they asked her to write "I understand the English language" on a piece of paper and the rest were just questions regarding her application and small talk. No biggie.

Diana

CR-1

02/05/07 - I-130 sent to NSC

05/03/07 - NOA2

05/10/07 - NVC receives petition, case # assigned

08/08/07 - Case Complete

09/27/07 - Interview, visa granted

10/02/07 - POE

11/16/07 - Received green card and Welcome to America letter in the mail

Removing Conditions

07/06/09 - I-751 sent to CSC

08/14/09 - Biometrics

09/27/09 - Approved

10/01/09 - Received 10 year green card

U.S. Citizenship

03/30/11 - N-400 sent via Priority Mail w/ delivery confirmation

05/12/11 - Biometrics

07/20/11 - Interview - passed

07/20/11 - Oath ceremony - same day as interview

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When I did my citizenship, they made me write a simple sentence and made me read about 3 sentences in both English. It was easy! But that experience was over a decade ago.

IR-1

Immigration Process

2007-02-22 **I-130 Sent to VSC

2007-07-02 **I-130 APPROVED at USCIS- CSC

2007-10-10 **CASE COMPLETED at NVC

2007-11-15 **INTERVIEW DATE. APPROVED at USEM!!!

USA

2007-12-02 **Arrival from MNL to JFK (NYC)

2007-12-10 **Visit to SSA

.png

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Lucy's taking a class offered by a local community organization (yes, I could probably teach her this, but after teaching her to drive, we both decided that our husband/wife relationship is better if we don't clutter it up with a student/teacher relationship). The class is almost finished. The instructor has helped lots of people through the exam, and asks for feedback after her students take the exam, so the instructor is pretty well informed by a variety of experiences. All indications are just like others have posted -- the only written portion is some simple dictation to make sure you can understand and write very simple basic English. The Civics questions are given orally. If you dig around the USCIS site, you can find the list of questions they normally use, plus you can find the list of pilot questions for the revised Civics exam. Many of the questions from the new pilot exam are similar to the old exam; a few are new.

04 Apr, 2004: Got married

05 Apr, 2004: I-130 Sent to CSC

13 Apr, 2004: I-130 NOA 1

19 Apr, 2004: I-129F Sent to MSC

29 Apr, 2004: I-129F NOA 1

13 Aug, 2004: I-130 Approved by CSC

28 Dec, 2004: I-130 Case Complete at NVC

18 Jan, 2005: Got the visa approved in Caracas

22 Jan, 2005: Flew home together! CCS->MIA->SFO

25 May, 2005: I-129F finally approved! We won't pursue it.

8 June, 2006: Our baby girl is born!

24 Oct, 2006: Window for filing I-751 opens

25 Oct, 2006: I-751 mailed to CSC

18 Nov, 2006: I-751 NOA1 received from CSC

30 Nov, 2006: I-751 Biometrics taken

05 Apr, 2007: I-751 approved, card production ordered

23 Jan, 2008: N-400 sent to CSC via certified mail

19 Feb, 2008: N-400 Biometrics taken

27 Mar, 2008: Naturalization interview notice received (NOA2 for N-400)

30 May, 2008: Naturalization interview, passed the test!

17 June, 2008: Naturalization oath notice mailed

15 July, 2008: Naturalization oath ceremony!

16 July, 2008: Registered to vote and applied for US passport

26 July, 2008: US Passport arrived.

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Filed: Citizen (pnd) Country: Canada
Timeline

Yep that's how it's done. One oral 10 question exam (he stopped after I got 6 right) and then write a sentance like I think mine was "My sister is making dinner" or something dumb and he also didn't bother with the spoken english as he said he already got my english comprehension by interviewing me already...

I'm just a wanderer in the desert winds...

Timeline

1997

Oct - Job offer in US

Nov - Received my TN-1 to be authorized to work in the US

Nov - Moved to US

1998-2001

Recieved 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th TN

2002

May - Met future wife at arts fest

Nov - Recieved 6th TN

2003

Nov - Recieved 7th TN

Jul - Our Wedding

Aug - Filed for AOS

Sep - Recieved EAD

Sep - Recieved Advanced Parole

2004

Jan - Interview, accepted for Green Card

Feb - Green Card Arrived in mail

2005

Oct - I-751 sent off

2006

Jan - 10 year Green Card accepted

Mar - 10 year Green Card arrived

Oct - Filed N-400 for Naturalization

Nov - Biometrics done

Nov - Just recieved Naturalization Interview date for Jan.

2007

Jan - Naturalization Interview Completed

Feb - Oath Letter recieved

Feb - Oath Ceremony

Feb 21 - Finally a US CITIZEN (yay)

THE END

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Filed: Citizen (apr) Country: Australia
Timeline

Hi Fiona! I was just thinking about you the other day and wondering how you were getting on :) Good to hear from you again! From what I hear, the citizenship test is pretty basic (and the 'new and improved' test will STILL be pretty simple, you just have to memorise different answers because they're changing the questions!)

Karen - Melbourne, Australia/John - Florida, USA

- Proposal (20 August 2000) to marriage (19 December 2004) - 4 years, 3 months, 25 days (1,578 days)

STAGE 1 - Applying for K1 (15 September 2003) to K1 Approval (13 July 2004) - 9 months, 29 days (303 days)

STAGE 2A - Arriving in US (4 Nov 2004) to AOS Application (16 April 2005) - 5 months, 13 days (164 days)

STAGE 2B - Applying for AOS to GC Approval - 9 months, 4 days (279 days)

STAGE 3 - Lifting Conditions. Filing (19 Dec 2007) to Approval (December 11 2008)

STAGE 4 - CITIZENSHIP (filing under 5-year rule - residency start date on green card Jan 11th, 2006)

*N400 filed December 15, 2011

*Interview March 12, 2012

*Oath Ceremony March 23, 2012.

ALL DONE!!!!!!!!

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