I have an LLB (4 years), an LLM (2 years) and an MBA (2 years) all of them from universities in the Dominican Republic.
My skill is actually supply chain (contracts and procurement) and I've been working for 5 years for a multinational canadian company in DR.
My question is: would I get points from my LLB and LLM in my EE application? I mean, do they count as a "professional degrees"?
I'm kinda confused, since law is a profesion that requires license in Canada. I'm not interested in practicing law in Canada, but I need to know if such degrees will give me the points in my EE application.
LLM is a Master's degree and so is an MBA, even if the LLB/LLM are not considered as professional degrees, they would be evaluated as Masters and you would get points for a Master's.
LLM is a Master's degree and so is an MBA, even if the LLB/LLM are not considered as professional degrees, they would be evaluated as Masters and you would get points for a Master's.
es.
Thanks so much. Last question, what is meant with continuous work experience? If i had 3 years with one employer, then a 4 month break before my current job for the past 2 years. Can i only claim 2 years continuous work or 5 years?
es.
Thanks so much. Last question, what is meant with continuous work experience? If i had 3 years with one employer, then a 4 month break before my current job for the past 2 years. Can i only claim 2 years continuous work or 5 years?
We have done the CRS calc on the Canadian website. Got 471. Busy doing our EE profile. When will we see the exact score we will enter into the pool with?
Because you need continuous work experience to qualify under the FSW.
So you need 1 year of continuous experience in NOC 0,A,B to qualify, but once you have qualified, for CRS points the work doesn't need to be continuous.
We have done the CRS calc on the Canadian website. Got 471. Busy doing our EE profile. When will we see the exact score we will enter into the pool with?
Thanks for advice. Another question, can we claim work experience for the time as articling lawyer, or only after one is admitted to the higher court, or after one passes the admission exams?