As NOC 2174 is skill level A, you have to have minimum 6 for all four abilities.surikumar said:NOC Code as 2174..
Jason is right. 6 required for each of the sections for any 0 or A occupations.jason214 said:As NOC 2174 is skill level A, you have to have minimum 6 for all four abilities.
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/immigrate/cec/language-testing.asp
if we consider 2 year exp class i am eligible right...jsm0085 said:Jason is right. 6 required for each of the sections for any 0 or A occupations.
Only if you applied prior to the 2nd January 2013. If you have not yet applied, then your IELTS results are too low to quality under CEC. You will need to retake the test aiming to get a minimum score of 6 in each section.surikumar said:if we consider 2 year exp class i am eligible right...
surikumar said:if we consider 2 year exp class i am eligible right...
The only difference you have identified is legal work experience, which I don't believe was in question.jason214 said:You must;
- have the minimum proficiency levels in English or French
: minimum CLB 7 for skill level A, minimum CLB 5 for skill level B
- have maintained temporary resident status during any periods of work experience
used to qualify for CEC;
: have to have gained work experience under valid work permits
- have qualifying Canadian skilled work experience
: have to have more than 12 months of skilled work experience within 36moths
not just IELTS, not just work experience.
Agreed. Andy, I'm not sure if you made the spreadsheet or not but I highly recommend adding Country or origin to it. Sometimes there are significant delays with processing of applications and I think it would be beneficial to all to see if certain countries cause lengthier delays in processing than others.Andy2109 said:Folks,
Can we please avoid generic questions on this thread and limit this thread only for tracking 2013 Jan applications. Those who have generic questions, please feel free to open a new thread to seek appropriate feedback.
I guess country of birth / citizenship?Andy2109 said:yes, i think it holds value. but by country of origin, do you point towards country of birth ? country of residence ? OR country from where being applied ?
Actually it will.Andy2109 said:i m not sure if the info (applicant's country of birth) is likely to have an impact on the timelines of the application. On the same lines, even countries travelled to and countries PCC obtained from, should also add to the processing time.
Jan applicants, can you please share your thoughts ? If we can build consensus, no harm in adding a column.