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How is Vancouver divided?
First despise those who post a lot of nonsense.

At present, when we say Vancouver, we all mean Greater Vancouver. Include Vancouver, West Vancouver, burnaby, Richmond, Langley, Surrey, New Westminster, Corkieran and North Vancouver.

Asians can be seen everywhere in the whole large temperature area. For example, early Hong Kong immigrants were concentrated in Richmond, while mainland immigrants were concentrated in Vancouver and burnaby. In addition, burnaby is also a place where immigrants in Taiwan Province Province are concentrated, and there will be many Korean and Japanese immigrants in Coquitlam and Surrey. Compared with West Vancouver and New Westminster, there will be fewer Chinese. Among them, West Vancouver is one of the two richest regions in Canada, most of which are House, so the population density is relatively small (no matter where you come from, rich people will choose here), and the West Vancouver School District in the city is also the best public education bureau in BC Province; New Westminster is an old city with blue-collar workers, so few people in China care about it, but the only public high school in NW is very good. North Vancouver is similar to West Vancouver.

According to your requirements, only the West Vancouver School District and Langley School District (with few Chinese, belonging to the new city, located a little far away, 40 minutes' drive to Vancouver) are close to the Greater Wenzhou area. The coincidence degree is 70%.

Victoria is the capital of BC province, a garden city, and the scenery is of course very good. The whole of vancouver island can be said to be a holy place for the elderly and outdoor sports (haha, personal feeling). There are not many schools under the Victorian Education Bureau. If you are an older international student, it is best to go to Victoria. You can study until you are 20 years old. And ESL counts as credits (hehe, other BC schools don't count). Graduation is easy, and this education bureau takes care of international students (because there are few). Recommend a school: Douglas Hill SS. In Chinese, this school is a secondary school attached to Victoria University. Meet the requirements of 85%.

High schools in Toronto are under the jurisdiction of the Toronto Education Bureau (TDSB). As for high schools in many cities, China students have few choices. The hot North Toronto SS, North SS and other two schools can't squeeze in, and there is no ESL course. Harbord CI has to line up, too Counting also saves several schools. If you must go to Toronto, consider the central business CI with commercial advantages or the central technology CI with many engineering courses. The name is a bit ugly, but it is the best choice.

The scenery in Toronto is good, not as modern as Beijing and Shanghai, but more natural.

I am tired of typing, I hope it will help you.