Awesome ! - that reduces the amount of work by 90 %DelPiero07 said:Yes, I understood the same![]()
Its going to be impossible to declare my trips since sometimes they dont stamp on the passport and its only a car trip between these 2 countries,what should i docarbonchemist said:The instruction says that the applicant must declare all travels in the past 10 years (including biz, training, tourism, etc.) so I assume all trips must be listed out even if they are not stamped on your passport. I'm gonna give details of the first 30 trips (a max of 30 entries), and list the rest of my travels in a separate sheet and attach it to the LOE.
Some countries like US/Canada and Mexico do not have exit stamps, or Singapore has the auto-clearance for its residents (no entry or exit stamp at all), you may wanna refer to air tickets etc. US has the online I-94 where all border-crossings are recorded and available for your reference.
Hopefully someone can confirm the part in RED aboveLyon37 said:So I was just reading the question in the actual AOR:
It says:
any trips outside their country of origin or of residence
in the last ten years (or since their 18th birthday if this was less than ten years
ago). Include all trips: tourism, business, training, etc.
So that likely means that if you change your country of residence or travel between your country of residence and country of origin, you don't have to include those trips. - Per my understanding, i think this is correct.
I believe changes of countries of residence need to be clearly stated in either this section or in the LoE.
- I'm not sure about this, is this really necessary ?. I thought of country of residence = one country (i.e. what we mention on our overall EE application as the country of residence / in other words, the current country of residence), irrespective of whether we moved there 3 years ago or 11 years ago) & country of origin = obviously the one where you are a citizen/hold passport. So anything to and fro b/w these two countries,
But only international travel that was not for change of residence and not between country of origin and country of residence needs to be included. - Per my understanding, i think this is correct.
Some people, including myself, have lived in more than one country of residence that are different from their country of origin. So for instance, I lived for 4 years as a resident in one country, then for 2 years as a resident in another, etc. These were countries of legal and financial residence, including paying local income tax, etc. I am interested to know if we should mention change of country of residence as part of travel history - If anyone can answer that, I'd really like to knowsodapop123 said:Hopefully someone can confirm the part in RED above
Let's say your job is X and in order to do that job (or to be qualified to do that job) you need a certificate, the question is whether you have it or not.Dan504 said:Can someone help me I am a little confused does this mean your nomination Certificate?
Canadian certificate of qualification Status: Complete
Does XXXX have a certificate of qualification from a Canadian province or territory?