A masters can take longer than what some ppl took to gain high marks in French. If u are committed to the French, it can be a faster way for some ppl, for others it may not. So I guess it can be a personal choice. Good luck in your masters!
A masters can take longer than what some ppl took to gain high marks in French. If u are committed to the French, it can be a faster way for some ppl, for others it may not. So I guess it can be a personal choice. Good luck in your masters!
Thanks!
The thing is, there is still an uncertainty with the points from French when you are trying to learn it from the scratch. Personally, I would prefer Master's and save French as the last option. Two reasons - 1. I would get a lot of points (40 points) after 1 - 1.5 years (5 more months in my case). 2. US as a backup, if Canada does not work out.
Thanks!
The thing is, there is still an uncertainty with the points from French when you are trying to learn it from the scratch. Personally, I would prefer Master's and save French as the last option. Two reasons - 1. I would get a lot of points (40 points) after 1 - 1.5 years (5 more months in my case). 2. US as a backup, if Canada does not work out.
Thanks!
The thing is, there is still an uncertainty with the points from French when you are trying to learn it from the scratch. Personally, I would prefer Master's and save French as the last option. Two reasons - 1. I would get a lot of points (40 points) after 1 - 1.5 years (5 more months in my case). 2. US as a backup, if Canada does not work out.
Ha ha, Way more optimism than the recent Ray of Hope threads
By point 2, I mean you get to work for 3 years with your master's + remaining years from your previous work permit here. Not really looking to go thru that US green card process, may lose my mind by the time it get's approved.