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From: Info4YourLife
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  • There is a china town in every corner on the world.

  • You arrive, a rich immigrant. You leave, a poor canadian.

  • BEWARE of the scam:

    When you apply for immigration to Canada you deal with government, but after you arrive, your real fate depend on employers and professional regulatory bodies. If your profession is regulated, you aren't allowed to work in your profession till you get a license which take years and thousands of dollars. Even after passing all exams, if you don't find an employer to give you the "Canadian experience" within a time frame, your file is closed and you have to start all again.

  • @reuven1967 Say I go to university in Australia to become a teacher and want to move to Canada, will I be fine?

  • @roelran

    I think teachers require certification. You should ask the certification body in Canada which requirements they have BEFORE applying for immigration

    If they ask for "Canadian experience" that means you need an employer to get that experience. Don't even think in immigrating unless you can comply with all requirements, otherwise you will lose a lot of time and money. I have an engineering degree from UK and here is useless, so I don't think a teacher from Australia will do better.

  • @reuven1967 hm, does it matter if I'm a citizen or not? So I'll have to do a teaching course in Canada to teach there? What did you do? Thanks for the time and help, mate. :)

  • @roelran

    PART 1 of 4

    Citizenship status doesn't give special treatment. Permanent residents it's the same. They only look for credentials, experience, residence eligibility, character, etc. Best you can do is to ask the certification body as I am not very knowledgeable of the situation for teachers. May be you have it easier, but the point is it's strongly recommended you will check your situation with them before jumping, because Canada is full of bad surprises, and you can have a bad time.

  • @roelran

    PART 2 of 4

    It's extremely easy to end up washing dishes in McDonald, also for professionals. Also take in account it's very difficult to find a job in Canada. As soon the employers note a foreign accent your chances drop about 75%. You need enough money to support yourself for at least one year, but that is all they want, you spending your money, they don't care if you find a job or not.

  • @roelran

    PART 3 of 4

    I'm trying to do the same, finding a job to obtain this damn "experience" these idiots believe is special, but

    otherwise I will need to leave because the laws and rules don't allow me, for example, to set my business. Canadians are pretty sick, they only follow instructions and have zero flexibility. You cannot see that from the application.

  • @roelran

    PART 4 of 4

    If you can skip Canada altogether is the best. I don't want to be discouraging, but the immigration system here is corrupt and crooked and they will not tell you because it's their business which keep going with your money you pay. But if you choose to come, better check everything you need to work here before making a final decision. If you don't, you need to be prepared to work any Mcjob you can find.

    BTW, what is wrong with Australia? I was thinking in moving there.

  • @reuven1967 Ok I will look into it more, thanks.

    There's nothing really wrong with Australia, it's a great country, I just don't like living here, it doesn't feel right.

  • @roelran Don't believe his crock of shit. My buddy immigrated from Mexico and his sister was boring in Gautemala, he is 16, but when he was 12 he had to study his exam, do what he had to do, passed and his parents and his family got into the paper, front page for becoming Canadian

  • @CamericaUSA

    Sorry CamericaUSA the only shit are you. The VAST majority of professional immigrants go right to low paid jobs for life. Are you also comparing a 16yo to immigrants with a career, who came because the gov. told them there is "skill shortages"? is ALL Bulls#i7. I am 3 years in Canada. 95% of immigrants NEVER got a job related to the professions. And anyone who don't believe this, just check themselves. Before applying send the resume to Canadian employers. The response: ZERO (0)

  • @reuven1967

    What country would you recommend immigrating to? I heard about Canada and they're pulling off a pretty neat scam luring professional immigrants to make them do low paying jobs.

  • @GazelleHeavy where did you heard that scam? what do you mean "professional" immigrants? lets say im moving to study in canada car design, and later on i get my citizenship, and then when i finish studying i won't get the same job for my skills compared to a canadian who is born in canada? and whats the scam i don't get it, you move to canada after 3 years you get citizenship and you apply to a job and they won't get you because you aren't born a canadian, or that the country give you low jobs?

  • @MrEran1996

    Immigrants who go to Canada with educational qualifications like doctors, engineers, plumbers, etc. are called professional immigrants. They're not asylum seekers or refugees from war torn countries. A professional immigrant goes to Canada because of job shortages advertised by the Canadian govt. But when they arrive they can't find jobs in their respective fields because the employers require "Canadian experience". This means they have to repeat their education...

    .

  • @MrEran1996

    (Cont.)... in Canada. The professional immigrants were not made aware of this fact beforehand. So they spend their days going to Colleges/Uni while working at low paying jobs to support themselves. Valuable time is lost in this process.

    But you might not have this problem because you're going as a student and will have Canadian qualifications. It doesn't matter where you are born as the employers only require "Canadian qualifications". Hope this answers your question

  • Blah-Blah-Blah... Bull Shit!!!

  • Anrdea is really pretty....

    i guess i should move to canada...

  • Comment removed

  • Comment removed

  • @bodizone1 Im Pure English can I come along? (due to more people / imigrants and the english equiv of rednecks where I come from in a much more smaller area than Canada)

  • @bodizone1 wow, you need help

  • Great Video, good information just what I needed.

  • Comment removed

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