7) Do you have a certificate of qualification from a Canadian province, territory or
federal body?
Note: A certificate of qualification lets people work in some skilled trades in
Canada. Only the provinces, territories and a federal body can issue these certificates. To get
one,
a person must have them assess their training, trade experience and skills to and then pass a
certification exam.
People usually have to go to the province or territory to be assessed. They may also need
experience
and training from an employer in Canada.
This isn’t the same as a nomination from a province or territory.
Select...
No
Yes
Additional Points
8) Do you have a valid job offer supported by a Labour Market Impact Assessment (if
needed )?
A valid job offer must be
full-time
in a skilled job listed as Skill Type 0, or Skill Level A or B in the 2011 National
Occupational Classification
supported by a Labour Market Impact Assessment (LMIA) or exempt from needing one
for one year from the time you become a permanent resident
A job offer isn’t valid if your employer is:
an embassy, high commission or consulate in Canada or
on the list of ineligible employers.
Whether an offer is valid or not also depends on different factors, depending on your case. See a
full
list of criteria for valid job offers .
Select...
No
Yes
10) Do you or your spouse or common law partner (if they will come with you to
Canada)
have at least one brother or sister living in Canada who is a citizen or permanent
resident?
Note: to answer yes, the brother or sister must be:
18 years old or older
related to you or your partner by blood, marriage, common-law partnership or adoption
have a parent in common with you or your partner
A brother or sister is related to you by:
blood (biological)
adoption
marriage (step-brother or step-sister)
Select...
No
Yes
11) What is the highest level of education for which your spouse or common-law
partner's has:
earned a Canadian degree, diploma or certificate; or
had an Educational Credential Assessment (ECA)? (ECAs must be from an approved
agency, in the last five years)
To get the correct number of points, make sure you choose the answer that best reflects your
case. For example:
If you have TWO Bachelor’s degrees, or one Bachelor’s AND a two year college
diploma,
choose – “Two or more certificates, diplomas, or degrees. One must be for a program of
three or more years.”
Select...
None, or less than secondary (high school)
Secondary diploma (high school graduation)
One-year program at a university, college, trade or technical school, or
other
institute
Two-year program at a university, college, trade or technical school, or
other
institute
Bachelor's degree (three or more year program at a university, college,
trade
or technical school, or other institute)
Two or more certificates, diplomas or degrees. One must be for a program
of
three or more years
Master's degree, or professional degree needed to practice in a licensed
profession
Doctoral level university degree (PhD)
12) In the last ten years, how many years of skilled work experience in Canada
does
your spouse/common-law partner have?
It must have been paid, full-time (or an equal amount in part-time), and in one or more NOC
TEER
category 0, 1, 2, or 3 jobs.
Select...
None or less than a year
1 year
2 years
3 years
4 years
5 years or more
13) i) Did your spouse or common-law partner take a language test? If so,
which
one?
Test results must be less than two years old.
Select...
CELPIP-G
IELTS
PTE Core
TEF Canada
TCF Canada
not applicable
ii) Enter the test scores for:
Speaking:
Select...
Listening:
Select...
Reading:
Select...
Writing:
Select...