As I am getting overall estimate of points quite less around 420-430 in express entry, I am thinking if it is practical to learn French in 2-3 months and get good enough score in French exam to bump up overall points for Canada ?
As I am getting overall estimate of points quite less around 420-430 in express entry, I am thinking if it is practical to learn French in 2-3 months and get good enough score in French exam to bump up overall points for Canada ?
As I am getting overall estimate of points quite less around 420-430 in express entry, I am thinking if it is practical to learn French in 2-3 months and get good enough score in French exam to bump up overall points for Canada ?
As I am getting overall estimate of points quite less around 420-430 in express entry, I am thinking if it is practical to learn French in 2-3 months and get good enough score in French exam to bump up overall points for Canada ?
To add on to what hamgha said, as a NON-French speaker (I'm a native English speaker), I briefly examined this option (I would have been learning it from scratch as well, as I studied Spanish at the secondary and tertiary education levels, not French) and quickly decided it was NOT worth it. French isn't as technically complicated as English (I think) since it doesn't appear to have all those ridiculous exceptions to rules that English does, but speaking French is VERY hard to learn if your native language has significantly different pronunciations and accents and other verbal nuances. If the TEF is anything like a French equivalent of IELTS/CELPIP in terms of difficulty, I can't imagine how anyone would be able to gain the necessary proficiency in a year (or even two years, if you're not naturally inclined in learning languages), without fully immersing themselves in the French culture and language... DelPiero, you must be some kind of language savant if you were able to learn enough on your own in one year to add any points to your CRS
It might be better for you to max out your English score. I got straight 9s on ielts (I'm English, but actually bothered to prepare for it so I could make the most of the time in the exam) and I think I got bonus points for getting the top scores. Like 50 crs points. I might be wrong though. Depending on how good you are at learning new languages, you could make a lot of effort and not gain much, if anything, by learning French from scratch.
As I am getting overall estimate of points quite less around 420-430 in express entry, I am thinking if it is practical to learn French in 2-3 months and get good enough score in French exam to bump up overall points for Canada ?
2-3 months is never going to happen. You need a minimum of one year of concentrated study and practice. And even then you may not achieve the required score.
@Berty3000 or anyone else - I checked the CRS point calculator link and when I change IELTS score to Max and then around 7 in all sections....total difference in points is showing around 10-15 only. Please let me know if there is any link you could share where I could see difference of 50 points when one score max in IELTS
Thanks. Above link I am aware but this link don't give difference of 50 points (As mentioned in this thread above) when someone scores max points.....so I was looking for the specific link where it shows bonus 50 points with max score
Thanks. Above link I am aware but this link don't give difference of 50 points (As mentioned in this thread above) when someone scores max points.....so I was looking for the specific link where it shows bonus 50 points with max score
Thanks. Above link I am aware but this link don't give difference of 50 points (As mentioned in this thread above) when someone scores max points.....so I was looking for the specific link where it shows bonus 50 points with max score
Dear All - Can you please advise me if I would get any points for DELF B2 in express entry. I cleared B2 exam not long ago and I am wondering if i really have to take TEF?