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Single mother

Ghazala Amin

Newbie
Oct 25, 2019
1
0
Hi,
I want to migrate to canada
As I am a single mother and have a 16 year old son
Is their any way I can come to Canada
I am a qualified and experienced teacher
With a good skill set
 

greenboymx

Star Member
Feb 10, 2018
147
173
You might find an option that suits you.

The fact that you are a single mother doesn’t really affect your application (as long as you have enough money to sustain yourself and your son for your first six months in Canada – you may find the exact amount in Canada.ca)

I’ll try to sum up the two most popular paths:

a) Express Entry via Federal Skilled Worker:

You create a profile and then you’ll be given a score based on:

1. Your age

2. Your English (or/and French) level

3. Your education

4. Your work experience

After that, you enter a pool of candidates. Almost every two weeks the government sends a round of invitations to the highest scores in the pool. If you are selected, you send all your documents and if everything is ok you receive your PR.


b) Studies

You enter Canada with a student visa to study a program of at least 1 year (ideally, at least 2) in a college or a university. Once you finish your program, you’ll have an open work permit for the same length of the course you took. During that period, you need to find a permanent job offer in the same field of the program you took. Once you have 1 year of experience, you can apply for a PR.

Keep in mind that:

- While you are studying, you’ll only be able to work part-time, so consider you’ll need enough money to sustain yourself and your son during that time, and the fee for international students is significantly more expensive than the fee for locals

- If you chose this path, you´ll apply through a provincial nomination from the province in which you studied; each province has its rules to give you the provincial nomination

- English courses don’t allow you to apply for a PR (nor every course offered by a college or university, you’ll need to verify if the course you are interested in has the option)


That’s pretty much the big picture of the two more popular paths (there are many other paths targeted at specific profiles that might as well suit your case). All the information is in the Immigration section at Canada.ca, that's the most trustworthy source of information.

Hope this helps
 
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canuck78

VIP Member
Jun 18, 2017
52,969
12,771
You might find an option that suits you.

The fact that you are a single mother doesn’t really affect your application (as long as you have enough money to sustain yourself and your son for your first six months in Canada – you may find the exact amount in Canada.ca)

I’ll try to sum up the two most popular paths:

a) Express Entry via Federal Skilled Worker:

You create a profile and then you’ll be given a score based on:

1. Your age

2. Your English (or/and French) level

3. Your education

4. Your work experience

After that, you enter a pool of candidates. Almost every two weeks the government sends a round of invitations to the highest scores in the pool. If you are selected, you send all your documents and if everything is ok you receive your PR.


b) Studies

You enter Canada with a student visa to study a program of at least 1 year (ideally, at least 2) in a college or a university. Once you finish your program, you’ll have an open work permit for the same length of the course you took. During that period, you need to find a permanent job offer in the same field of the program you took. Once you have 1 year of experience, you can apply for a PR.

Keep in mind that:

- While you are studying, you’ll only be able to work part-time, so consider you’ll need enough money to sustain yourself and your son during that time, and the fee for international students is significantly more expensive than the fee for locals

- If you chose this path, you´ll apply through a provincial nomination from the province in which you studied; each province has its rules to give you the provincial nomination

- English courses don’t allow you to apply for a PR (nor every course offered by a college or university, you’ll need to verify if the course you are interested in has the option)


That’s pretty much the big picture of the two more popular paths (there are many other paths targeted at specific profiles that might as well suit your case). All the information is in the Immigration section at Canada.ca, that's the most trustworthy source of information.

Hope this helps
Children are not guaranteed a permits/visa to accompany their parents. After yigh school the child would not qualify for a work permit and would need pay international fees.

You will need to get licensed to teach in Canada. That can be quite hard in some provinces and require more education. There are a surplus of teachers in many areas of Canada.
 
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Engr_Sam

Full Member
Nov 5, 2019
38
1
Hi,
I want to migrate to canada
As I am a single mother and have a 16 year old son
Is their any way I can come to Canada
I am a qualified and experienced teacher
With a good skill set
Hi
where do you reside Ghazala?
yes you can try express entry program or try to get enrolled in some teaching course