whats so special about the book that you're offering on your website?canadacareerhunt said:Visit canadacareerhunt.com for free resources on job search in Canada.
whats so special about the book that you're offering on your website?canadacareerhunt said:Visit canadacareerhunt.com for free resources on job search in Canada.
hi, i have seen in your timeline that u are under csq, i want to ask if u landed first in montreal ? and how many mos did you move to other province?Ketevan said:I lived 5 years in Scotland and in 5 years I never even had a chance to put on a T-shirt as temperature never rose above +15. I would rather live in Saskatoon - at least it has summer.
genona said:hi, i have seen in your timeline that u are under csq, i want to ask if u landed first in montreal ? and how many mos did you move to other province?
thanks
You would be wrong. Trust me.WillLeaveOnceIGetPassport said:The only serious interview I got in these months was a university interview in Toronto for assistant professorship which makes me feel that english speaking provinces are less sceptical to foreign diplomas than Quebec
The job market for assistant professors is so extremely tiny that there's no point in generalizing -- every single application is unique. Canada is a tiny academic market, coming here from elsewhere and trying to begin at a beginning level, with no contacts and a non-academic job, is extremely difficult. I strongly recommend that you examine your PhD to see what it can be adapted to. Even college jobs are difficult, you should look in particular at extremely remote situations, online places like Athabasca U, distance education for the North, Nunavut, etc.WillLeaveOnceIGetPassport said:Yes I landed in Montreal and I am still here. I started searching outside Quebec though because I am unable to get any qualified job here. It is my 10th month in Canada and I am still working in call centre. The only serious interview I got in these months was a university interview in Toronto for assistant professorship which makes me feel that english speaking provinces are less sceptical to foreign diplomas than Quebec
on-hold said:The job market for assistant professors is so extremely tiny that there's no point in generalizing -- every single application is unique. Canada is a tiny academic market, coming here from elsewhere and trying to begin at a beginning level, with no contacts and a non-academic job, is extremely difficult. I strongly recommend that you examine your PhD to see what it can be adapted to. Even college jobs are difficult, you should look in particular at extremely remote situations, online places like Athabasca U, distance education for the North, Nunavut, etc.
How sad and utterly pathetic that you have to delete all your achievements in life to appear stupid to the average Canadian employee.Ketevan said:(I deleted all degrees from it!)
No it's not. I'd say it's rather uncommon here.mrbeachman said:I think this is the only country in the world where this is a normal practice.