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Hi guys,
I need your opinions here.
I had a Full-time seasonal NOC B job in the summer of 2015 (June - August) and worked weekends from September to October. I was a student during these periods and finished my final exams in April 2016. I continued working for this company as soon as I completed my education and applied for my PGWP. I got my PGWP on May 31, 2016. This company shut down towards the end of November 2016 because of the winter. I have 1880 hours in total, applied for EE, and was invited.
1) A friend told me that the hours accrued while I was a student wouldn't count :'( is this true?
2) If this is true, should my employer give me a reference letter from when I got my PGWP or when I started working for the company?
3) Seasonal jobs are sometimes 50hrs/wk, 20hrs/week or even 60hrs/wk depending on the workload. How should I calculate the hours?
4) Should I decline the invitation?
Thanks
ChrisBanks said:
Hi guys,
I need your opinions here.
I had a Full-time seasonal NOC B job in the summer of 2015 (June - August) and worked weekends from September to October. I was a student during these periods and finished my final exams in April 2016. I continued working for this company as soon as I completed my education and applied for my PGWP. I got my PGWP on May 31, 2016. This company shut down towards the end of November 2016 because of the winter. I have 1880 hours in total, applied for EE, and was invited.
1) A friend told me that the hours accrued while I was a student wouldn't count :'( is this true?
2) If this is true, should my employer give me a reference letter from when I got my PGWP or when I started working for the company?
3) Seasonal jobs are sometimes 50hrs/wk, 20hrs/week or even 60hrs/wk depending on the workload. How should I calculate the hours?
4) Should I decline the invitation?
Thanks
If you only have this experience, decline invitation.
http://www.cic.gc.ca/english/helpcentre/answer.asp?qnum=394&top=29
Thanks.
But the work I did wasn't co-op and part of my studies. It was entirely different
Work experience does not count during full time study. Otherwise is should be ok.
For future application.... should my employer give me a reference letter from when I got my PGWP or when I started working for the company?
ChrisBanks said:
I had a Full-time seasonal NOC B job in the summer of 2015 (June - August) and worked weekends from September to October. I was a student during these periods and finished my final exams in April 2016. I continued working for this company as soon as I completed my education and applied for my PGWP. I got my PGWP on May 31, 2016. This company shut down towards the end of November 2016 because of the winter. I have 1880 hours in total, applied for EE, and was invited.
1) A friend told me that the hours accrued while I was a student wouldn't count :'( is this true?
This is true. You can start counting work experience after you graduate.
2) If this is true, should my employer give me a reference letter from when I got my PGWP or when I started working for the company?
They can explain that you started working when you were a student, and continued after graduation. (Your degree/diploma and/or transcript will provide the date of graduation, but it would be a good idea for you to include a brief letter of explanation).
3) Seasonal jobs are sometimes 50hrs/wk, 20hrs/week or even 60hrs/wk depending on the workload. How should I calculate the hours?
If it is full-time ("30 or more hours per week"), then it is simply "full-time", you do not calculate hours.
Alternatively, you can count a maximum of 30 hours per week. Then add your hours and divide by 30, that tells you the number of full-time equivalent (FTE) weeks.
Example:
Week 1: 20 hours - count 20
Week 2: 40 hours - count 30
Week 3: 62 hours - count 30
Week 4: 10 hours - count 10
Total countable hours: 90
90/30 = 3 FTE weeks
4) Should I decline the invitation?
It sounds like you have about 7 months of post-graduation work experience. You are not yet eligible, so you should decline the ITA. You need to work for a full year / 52 weeks full-time.
Jes_On, you are on point.
Thanks, I do appreciate
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