Joined-up support across the study abroad journey.
Student International offers structured, realistic guidance for students from China, Hong Kong, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, and the wider East Asian and Southeast Asian region — from early planning through to the first weeks abroad. The right service depends on the stage you are at and the decision you are facing now.
Which service fits the stage you are at?
Most students do not need every service. They need the one or two that match where they are right now. Here is the simplest way to read the menu.

Comparing destinations and courses.
Start with destination and application planning. The decisions made here shape every later step, so it is worth taking the time to get them right.

Building applications and funding the place.
Application support, scholarship guidance, and visa support work best as one connected timeline rather than three separate pushes.

Closing the gap before the flight.
Tuition support and mentorship help students arrive academically and personally ready, not just admitted.

Extra structure where families need it.
Guardianship, companionship, and summer programmes add support for younger students or families new to sending a child abroad.
One plan, in five clear stages.
Each service is useful on its own. Together, they form the connected plan that makes the journey feel ordered rather than improvised.
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1
Compare direction.
Weigh destinations, course types, and what the family budget can realistically support before any application is opened.
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2
Prepare applications.
Build undergraduate or postgraduate applications around the agreed shortlist, with personal statements that say something honest.
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3
Plan funding and visa steps.
Sequence scholarship applications and the study visa as part of the same timeline — not a panic at the end.
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4
Build academic and practical readiness.
Use tuition support and mentorship to close gaps before arrival, so the first term is steadier than the last six months of school.
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5
Stay supported through transition.
Continue alongside the student through accommodation, departure, and the first weeks abroad — guardianship and companionship where families want extra structure.
Joined-up planning, realistic advice.
The services share one adviser, one shortlist, and one timeline. That is what makes the journey feel ordered rather than handed off between teams that do not talk to each other.
- One adviser stays with the student across stages, so context is never lost.
- Advice is realistic about budget, profile, and timing — not aspirational for its own sake.
- Family questions about safety, welfare, and accommodation are part of the plan, not an afterthought.
- Each service hands off cleanly to the next, so the student is never left guessing what comes after the offer.
Find the service that fits your next decision.
A first conversation is short and obligation-free. We listen first, then suggest one or two services worth focusing on now — and explain how each fits into the wider plan.





