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Re: Teaching in Canada
Just to add for your wife to meet Canadian nurse requirements she will need both clinical and theory hours in Mental health, Paeds, Obstetrics as well as general adult. Even then we are seeing UK nurses struggle to meet requirements in some provinces and have to do some form of assessment before meeting requirements. At some stage she will need to pass CRNE and than can only be taken in Canada three times a year.
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Re: Teaching in Canada
Unfortunately The Aviator, Bill_S, et al. are correct. However, if you are determined and can sell yourself, I'm sure you could land something. If you wanted immediate full-time work, private or remote [far North] teaching is probably the best route. The teaching wiki is spot on. There are 100s of education related jobs posted weekly across the nation (http://www.educationcanada.com/); there are some regional shortages, and an overall need for administrative educators (even in Ont/BC/QC).
If you can teach in French (programme, not subject) and the advanced sciences/math, you'd stand a pretty good chance of getting a job right away - in almost any province. Good luck! |
Re: Teaching in Canada
Originally Posted by BTJ
(Post 8755682)
Worth it though if you can break in. If you have a Master's degree and 10 years of teaching in say School District 69 - Qualicum in BC you get a very generous $81488. In BC all the Salary Grids are here: http://bctf.ca/SalaryAndBenefits.aspx?id=14758 and the Categories are evaluated by TQS solely based on academic qualifications.
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Re: Teaching in Canada
Originally Posted by Almost Canadian
(Post 8757497)
So after obtaining a Masters and working for 10 years, you believe a salary of $81,488 is a good one? I have no idea where Qualicum is, but after spending the time in school and the time on the job required for that salary, I do not believe it is "very generous"
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Re: Teaching in Canada
Originally Posted by Almost Canadian
(Post 8757497)
So after obtaining a Masters and working for 10 years, you believe a salary of $81,488 is a good one? I have no idea where Qualicum is, but after spending the time in school and the time on the job required for that salary, I do not believe it is "very generous"
I could have got a doctorate, but it would not meant I did my job any better than a guy who had just had a high school diploma and similar experience. |
Re: Teaching in Canada
Originally Posted by Almost Canadian
(Post 8757497)
So after obtaining a Masters and working for 10 years, you believe a salary of $81,488 is a good one? I have no idea where Qualicum is, but after spending the time in school and the time on the job required for that salary, I do not believe it is "very generous"
Around the turn of the last century (2000) many provincial govs reduced the teacher pay scales for MA & PhD teachers - their perceived intention was to force these teachers into the higher education sectors and administration. It worked for a while, but I still see numbers of staff completing their MA and even PhD - why, I'm not sure, 'cos it doesn't rap any big benefit. Who knows? Who cares? http://www.nucleuslearning.com/conte...-across-canada http://www.ctf-fce.ca/TIC/Default.aspx?SID=625892 http://www.qpat-apeq.qc.ca/corporati...dbenefits.html UK salary scale (NUT) http://www.teachers.org.uk/taxonomy/term/233 |
Re: Teaching in Canada
Originally Posted by dthomas
(Post 8757562)
but I still see numbers of staff completing their MA and even PhD - why, I'm not sure, 'cos it doesn't rap any big benefit. Who knows? Who cares?
Contract teachers like Mrs AX on the other hand.......... |
Re: Teaching in Canada
Originally Posted by Atlantic Xpat
(Post 8757598)
In Nfld, you need to have your Masters to get into an Administrative position, e.g. Vice Principal or Principal. Many teachers do it simply to get a bump up the pay scale. Permanent teachers can get funding/time off to study so it's a bit of a win win.
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Re: Teaching in Canada
Originally Posted by Almost Canadian
(Post 8757497)
So after obtaining a Masters and working for 10 years, you believe a salary of $81,488 is a good one? I have no idea where Qualicum is, but after spending the time in school and the time on the job required for that salary, I do not believe it is "very generous"
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