What is Canadian Experience Class (CEC)?
Canadian Experience Class was introduced on September 2008, to facilitate the immigration process for temporary residents who are in Canada on study permit and work permits.
Who qualify under CEC?
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- a temporary foreign worker with at least two years of full-time (or equivalent) skilled work experience in Canada, or
- a foreign graduate from a Canadian post-secondary institution with at least one year of full-time (or equivalent) skilled work experience in Canada
If someone meets the requirements to apply under the Canadian Experience Class but have since returned to their home country. Will they be eligible to apply under the Canadian Experience Class?
Yes, but you must apply within one year of leaving your job in Canada. If you left your job more than one year ago, your work experience is not recent and does not meet the requirement.
Does part-time work experience count toward meeting the requirements for work experience?
Yes, but it will take you longer to accumulate the amount of hours necessary to apply than an applicant who has worked full-time.
If someone wants to apply as a graduate, Can part-time work experience during their full-time studies in Canada be counted toward the one-year requirement?
No. Your work experience must be gained after graduation.
If someone wants to apply as a graduate. Does work experience that was part of their educational program’s requirements (such as Co-op terms and apprenticeships) count toward the one-year requirement?
No. Co-op terms and apprenticeships completed before graduating do not count as skilled work experience as they are considered part of an educational program. For this reason, co-op terms and apprenticeships are counted as part of the minimum two-year educational program requirement.
If someone has a one-year master’s degree (or one-year certificate) from a Canadian post-secondary educational institution. Will they be eligible to apply for permanent residence under the Canadian Experience Class?
Anyone accepted as a permanent resident under the Canadian Experience Class (based on their studies) has to have studied in Canada for at least two years.
Normally, this means you graduated with a Canadian post-secondary credential that requires at least two academic years of study, but there is one exception.
If you completed a one-year master’s (certificates and diplomas do not count with this exception), you would be eligible if you earned it after completing another program of at least one academic year in Canada. Both credentials must be obtained from a post-secondary institution recognized by the province. Each program must be completed within two years of each other.
If a person doesn’t have a total of two years of Canadian post-secondary education, are there any other options to apply to stay permanently under the Canadian Experience Class?
No. However, if you do not meet the requirements to apply as a graduate, you can position yourself to apply as a skilled temporary foreign worker. To do this, you must gain two years of skilled work experience.
Having completed a one-year post-secondary educational program in Canada, you qualify for a one-year open work permit under the Post-Graduation Work Permit program. You may use this permit to gain your first year of skilled work experience. This may lead to other employment opportunities toward gaining your second year. An employer may need to sponsor you for employment beyond your first year.
If someone have already submitted an application for permanent residence as a skilled worker (the traditional way to apply), can I still apply under this category?
Yes, but applicants are required to submit a new application with new fees.
If CIC has not started processing the skilled worker application, the applicant could withdraw it and may be entitled to a refund.
It is not forbidden to apply simultaneously with two different streams of the Economic Class.
However, the applicant will have to choose under which one the permanent resident status will be granted.
When a person has applied for temporary residence, they needed to have a medical exam to get my work or study permit. Why do they have to have another medical exam to apply for permanent residence from within Canada?
Since the reasons for medical exams for temporary and permanent residence are different, and because of the amount of time in between tests, you may have to undergo two medical exams—one for each application.
Some applicants, depending on where they lived, may have needed a medical exam to come to Canada temporarily. This medical exam would have verified that they pose no health risk to the Canadian public.
All applicants for permanent residence in economic categories must go through medical screening for the reason above in addition to verifying that neither they nor a family member would pose an excessive demand on Canada’s health, education and social systems.
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