Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 - Travel (731) - Nairaland
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| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by jedisco(m): 7:50am On Sep 05, 2024 |
stevolinkon40:Yeah. He would send it to me together with my bank card and other correspondence. Didn't know abt the 2yr criteria. Would they give you a provisional licence at least? 8 months still far small |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by oyetpel(m): 3:31pm On Sep 05, 2024 |
Maria96:Gracias |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by Honeysweetest(f): 3:47pm On Sep 05, 2024 |
ednut1:thank you. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by slydog(m): 1:17am On Sep 06, 2024 |
njambert:Multifamily Investments |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by slydog(m): 1:22am On Sep 06, 2024 |
Ontarioo:Yes bro, one needs to study his environment and act swiftly. Late last yr I joined the public service and picked up a 2nd job, from where I raised cash for another dp. With appreciation I sold my first place, I dey basement so, lol. Currently seeking multifamily properties investment opportunities. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by smartkester(m): 11:41am On Sep 06, 2024 |
geekybabe:I read your thread and it was a lovely experience. Congratulations 🎉 Please what's the job market like for Chemical Engineers or Engineering at large in Canada |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by Maria96: 1:08pm On Sep 06, 2024 |
smartkester:use google. She is not a chemical engineer and wouldn’t know 😅 |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by aestake: 2:40pm On Sep 06, 2024 |
Maria96: ![]() |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by RelaxingEnd: 3:50pm On Sep 06, 2024 |
geekybabe:Hi, it was interesting to read your diary. This data analyst job you found, what is it like? Not that I want to become a typical data analyst, but I want to get some analysis skills I could use in other jobs. I'm currently taking SQL and some other data analysis courses. I'm just wondering what your actual day-to-day duties are like in the job you found. Thank you! |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by geekybabe(f): 12:22am On Sep 07, 2024 |
RelaxingEnd:Data analysis is different in each organization. My role is a combination of everything. Sourcing data, building ETL pipelines , data cleaning, wrangling, some analysis, data modeling and presentations. Many tools out there but SQL is still king. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by smartkester(m): 3:58pm On Sep 07, 2024 |
Maria96:Alright. Thank you |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by RelaxingEnd: 4:55pm On Sep 07, 2024 |
geekybabe:Impressive! That sounds like a lot of work. I had an internship where part of my job involved pulling data from Oracle, cleaning on Excel, building dashboards and reporting findings. Learnt a lot, made mistakes as well. That was my introduction to data analysis, but I'm honestly confused on how to progress from here or what kind of data analyst I want to be. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by SlowlybtSurely: 7:24am On Sep 08, 2024 |
tensazangetsu20:Normal things. Most citizens only see the ills of their country. Americans are leaving US in droves and complain alot about the US. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by SlowlybtSurely: 7:27am On Sep 08, 2024 |
lastkingsman:The job market is no respecter of PR or citizens these days. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by ednut1(m): 1:38pm On Sep 08, 2024 |
SlowlybtSurely:people usually start seeing the ills when things become hard for them. Majority of Canadians were not aware of the Temporary foreign workers scheme/ subsidies for businesses hiring them till they couldn’t get jobs themselves. High cost of living ( rent, mortgage, interest rates, groceries) too will make people get angry while the government is sending billIons to Ukraine. Its normal human reaction o. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by megastu(m): 6:53pm On Sep 08, 2024 |
Yeah Canada just announced its highest unemployment rate ever seen since 2017 (asides Covid). ednut1: |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by olalekan9320(m): 8:16pm On Sep 08, 2024 |
ednut1:I've heard this many times from people especially those who are 'pro close borders' but I can't see anything of such on canada.ca and I want to believe it's just a rhetoric these people keep recycling. TFW might be willing to accept lower wage than someone born here though |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by ednut1(m): 9:37pm On Sep 08, 2024*. Modified: 1:39am On Sep 09, 2024 |
olalekan9320:https://www.canada.ca/en/employment-social-development/services/foreign-workers.html Here. Some jobs didn’t need LMIA. Chinese, Indian and Filipinos benefited most from it because they own companies they can use for hiring unlike Nigerians. Plus the sheer number of students approved/admitted for diploma courses were very high in schools now tagged diploma mills. https://www.cicnews.com/2024/07/new-data-suggests-growing-demand-for-temporary-foreign-workers-in-several-canadian-industries-0745326.html/amp |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by Zeewirld: 12:28pm On Sep 09, 2024 |
geekybabe:. Difficult writing on your japa page due to insufficient permission something. Thanks for share a real life experience with us. Considering your experience and knowing what you now know....Would you advise; ■A family to land together or the PA comes in first for some months and try to settle in first by getting a job,accommodation and other stuffs before others come in?? ■Do you think it's a wise decision for a PR to start off from Ontario ■For PR holders,who aren't PNP,without any support system in Canada and low on cash.....Where would you suggest they start from?? Wishing you all the best |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by Nobody: 6:09pm On Sep 09, 2024*. Modified: 8:43pm On Sep 09, 2024 |
jedisco:Calgary's blue skies are beautiful....love it......sunniest city in Canada with over 300 days of unfiltered vitamin D! |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by jedisco(m): 9:51pm On Sep 09, 2024 |
GraciousWords:Hmm.. didn't know it was the sunniest. Was truly beautiful to see moreso coming from the UK where it's layers and layers of cloud. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by geekybabe(f): 4:11am On Sep 10, 2024 |
Zeewirld:Well, It really depends. I landed here alone and honestly, the only reason I chose Ontario is because my brothers family is here. I stayed with them ( for 5months) till I found my first job and only moved after working for a month and I also had savings that I brought with me to canada (MY POF was intact and even had some extra till I landed). I later used the bulk of the savings for accommodation and settling the deposit, first rent and doing the basic furnishing for my apartment. Even though I had family support and soft landing, the job market situation was still very frustrating and overwhelming. So, it depends on your savings, the size of your family, your career path and industry (tech, healthcare) etc.. What I will tell you is that the cost of living in Ontario is very very high and the competition is very high, even though there are opportunities. Yes there are govt support initiatives if you are PR, but honestly, its hard to live on those. There is a wait time for everything here. To find school for kids, family doctors, etc, you will have to get on a waiting list. Ontario is a very big province, some cities/towns are a bit cheaper to live in. if you can, Avoid saturated cities( Toronto , Brampton, ).If you & your spouse both have jobs now in your home country, then one person can come land and start the hustle and bring family later. the other persons income back home can then sustain the family while the landed person keeps on hustling. The landed spouse can even find a shared appt or something to manage to just keep the hustle going here and save money before the rest of the family joins. Rent is very very high. PR is great, but honestly at the point of application Everybody is applying to the same job pool. PR, Work permit, study permit, Refugee, Citizens. As far as the job market is concerned, it is not really your residential status that matters. Manage your expectations and pray for favour. The land will favour you. Wishing you the best.. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by ICONEB: 2:52am On Sep 11, 2024 |
Hello everyone, please can someone who’s on a spouse work permit enroll for an 8 month course? |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by Qwertyuser: 1:21pm On Sep 11, 2024 |
Zeewirld:I know a family of 3, no support system, all landed in Calgary recently, just 1 month rent and security deposit and some change left. 1 month after - man got a job, baby got daycare, 2 month later wife got 2 jobs They are now settled at least to live decent. To survive upon landing, Just Pray (if you believe), work harder, take any menial job you find and don’t be overly selective. Then work your way into meaningful Jobs. For me I’d say land all together unless you wan take your time find better work. For landing province, you have to do your research about housing and job market. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by JIREN01: 2:09am On Sep 12, 2024 |
geekybabe:A full fledged data engineering role it appears; I appreciate your heads up ma’am; I’ll like to ask if all the final interviews you did were in person or virtual? |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by geekybabe(f): 11:07pm On Sep 12, 2024 |
JIREN01:Yea. I guess they just advertised as an analyst role to manage Salary expectations. It’s actually an analytics engineer role IMO. My first job offer, it was a pre-recorded video interview for the screening, and the next 2 were physical interviews. My 2nd offer, all virtual interviews. 4 stages. The company is fully remote. But honestly, I don’t think Interview mode matters. Prepare, be very bold and assertive and hope for the best. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by ShalewaT: 8:05pm On Sep 13, 2024 |
Hello all ![]() I need all the advice and recommendations I can get rn. I am a Canadian PR, currently living outside Canada cos I had to leave to care for my baby. She is going to be a little over one year by the time I'm ready to return. I plan to return with my baby, and it's going to be just me and her. I have barely 6 months left and I need job recommendations that fits for someone with a baby with no help. I want to start actively applying. I am a skilled braider and loctician, tho I'm not sure if that will be enough for me. The only job experience I have is healthcare assistant job. I trained for a project management course and I've updated my CV to fit into a entry level role, but nothing yet. All the job descriptions are just out of it for me. I'll be in the comments :[ before my head will blow from over thinking |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by Venom104: 10:19pm On Sep 13, 2024 |
[quote author=ShalewaT post=131989580][/quote]Depending on your location, Early childhood educator. Although I think it is saturated, see if you can get the Level 1 certification ( link is online). Find work in a daycare that may also accept your child. Go and come home together. Keep applying till you get something in your field and leave your child in daycare. Good luck. |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by EuniqueBabe: 1:11am On Sep 17, 2024 |
Hello everyone, Please is it allowed to claim points for 2 DEGREES that were acquired concurrently. That is, both degrees were done same period in different location. For example schooling in person somewhere while doing another degree online in another school during the same period. Appreciate a response please and thank you |
| Re: Living In Canada/Life As A Canadian Immigrant Part 2 by tenderjunkie: 5:00pm On Sep 18, 2024 |
A friend of mine is moving to Canada (Wetaskiwin, Alberta) by October. He's looking to secure an accomodation before he lands. Any suggestions and hints will be appreciated |
Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 3) • Living In The USA - Life Of An Immigrant Part 1 • Living In The Uk-life Of An Immigrant (part 2) • 2 • 3 • 4
Canadian Express Entry/federal Skilled Workers Program Connect Here • Canada Visit/tourist Visa Discussion.

