victoriaaa Posted February 9, 2017 Posted February 9, 2017 I'm returning to Canada from Japan for a masters, and I've been accepted at McGill, which was my top choice. Unfortunately, while I am billingual, neither of those languages is French. I was in French immersion up until grade 5, then was homeschooled for about 3 years, then took Japanese as my second language requirement in high school. My French is super rusty, though I can read and understand it pretty well. I've been crash coursing myself with DuoLingo and it's coming back slowly but surely, though I have serious doubts about it being at a working proficiency by September. How have Anglophone McGill/Concordia/Montreal/etc University students found living and working in Montreal? I feel like I'll manage enough French to get by in daily life, but I'm more worried about finding work. I'm very much willing to learn, but will employers be willing to take me on even if I'm not fluent? I'm fairly fluent in Japanese, and I'm not sure what the Japanese scene is like in Montreal. Are there any employment possibilities for billingual speakers of Asian languages in areas like tourism and such? I used to live in Vancouver where lots of Asian tourists come so speaking an Asian language was always an asset, but Montreal is a whole other world for me. Any advice or personal experiences would be super appreciated!
Empacher Posted February 19, 2017 Posted February 19, 2017 On 2/9/2017 at 1:36 AM, victoriaaa said: I'm returning to Canada from Japan for a masters, and I've been accepted at McGill, which was my top choice. Unfortunately, while I am billingual, neither of those languages is French. I was in French immersion up until grade 5, then was homeschooled for about 3 years, then took Japanese as my second language requirement in high school. My French is super rusty, though I can read and understand it pretty well. I've been crash coursing myself with DuoLingo and it's coming back slowly but surely, though I have serious doubts about it being at a working proficiency by September. How have Anglophone McGill/Concordia/Montreal/etc University students found living and working in Montreal? I feel like I'll manage enough French to get by in daily life, but I'm more worried about finding work. I'm very much willing to learn, but will employers be willing to take me on even if I'm not fluent? I'm fairly fluent in Japanese, and I'm not sure what the Japanese scene is like in Montreal. Are there any employment possibilities for billingual speakers of Asian languages in areas like tourism and such? I used to live in Vancouver where lots of Asian tourists come so speaking an Asian language was always an asset, but Montreal is a whole other world for me. Any advice or personal experiences would be super appreciated! 3 You'll be fine. If you are working at McGill you will likely forget at time that you are in a French Province. Most people are bilingual. People, both Anglo and Franco-phone appreciate that you try to learn French. It is the sort of expected default language, but not necessary and almost everyone will give you a pass if you are foreign.
somuchtoread Posted February 20, 2017 Posted February 20, 2017 I have just been accepted to McGill's PhD program and although I'm still waiting on other offers, I'm quite certain that I will end up in McGill. Looking into renting options etc. Where do people ususally look? Craigslist? Kijiji? Thanks
abbyecrt555 Posted February 25, 2017 Posted February 25, 2017 @victoriaaa, PM sent! I have recently been accepted for the MScPH program at McGill and will be moving there this summer. victoriaaa 1
abbyecrt555 Posted February 25, 2017 Posted February 25, 2017 @Pahi Craislist is the best! McGill also has their own website for off campus housing (link below), I would also recommend looking there. Kijiji is okay, but mostly a bunch of re-posts from craigslist. Good luck!https://www.mcgill.ca/students/housing/offcampus
abbyecrt555 Posted February 25, 2017 Posted February 25, 2017 (edited) On 2017-02-08 at 10:36 PM, victoriaaa said: I'm returning to Canada from Japan for a masters, and I've been accepted at McGill, which was my top choice. Unfortunately, while I am billingual, neither of those languages is French. I was in French immersion up until grade 5, then was homeschooled for about 3 years, then took Japanese as my second language requirement in high school. My French is super rusty, though I can read and understand it pretty well. I've been crash coursing myself with DuoLingo and it's coming back slowly but surely, though I have serious doubts about it being at a working proficiency by September. How have Anglophone McGill/Concordia/Montreal/etc University students found living and working in Montreal? I feel like I'll manage enough French to get by in daily life, but I'm more worried about finding work. I'm very much willing to learn, but will employers be willing to take me on even if I'm not fluent? I'm fairly fluent in Japanese, and I'm not sure what the Japanese scene is like in Montreal. Are there any employment possibilities for billingual speakers of Asian languages in areas like tourism and such? I used to live in Vancouver where lots of Asian tourists come so speaking an Asian language was always an asset, but Montreal is a whole other world for me. Any advice or personal experiences would be super appreciated! @victoriaaa, I've spent several weekends in Montreal and although French is the primary Language used in Quebec, most people in Montreal can speak English, at least a bit. I have found that the further you move away from Montreal, the more likely you are to encounter people who cannot speak English. With respect to finding employment, I'm sure you'll be able to find employment on campus or downtown without much issue. Cheers Edited February 25, 2017 by joelcollard6
victoriaaa Posted February 27, 2017 Posted February 27, 2017 On 2017年2月21日 at 4:46 AM, Pahi said: I have just been accepted to McGill's PhD program and although I'm still waiting on other offers, I'm quite certain that I will end up in McGill. Looking into renting options etc. Where do people ususally look? Craigslist? Kijiji? Thanks If you don't mind sharing, I've found some nice looking places for affordable prices on easyroommate.com
nooxhc Posted March 3, 2017 Posted March 3, 2017 from this year http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/montreal-named-world-s-best-city-for-students-1.3984987
Adelaide9216 Posted March 13, 2017 Posted March 13, 2017 That's my hometown. If you guys have any questions, just let me know.
Adelaide9216 Posted March 13, 2017 Posted March 13, 2017 On 25 février 2017 at 5:50 PM, joelcollard6 said: @victoriaaa, I've spent several weekends in Montreal and although French is the primary Language used in Quebec, most people in Montreal can speak English, at least a bit. I have found that the further you move away from Montreal, the more likely you are to encounter people who cannot speak English. With respect to finding employment, I'm sure you'll be able to find employment on campus or downtown without much issue. Cheers I guess it depends. In social work, we've been told many times that students who have no or limited knowledge of French would really struggle to find a field placement and a job in Montreal/Quebec. Maybe it's just the nature of the work (helping relationship). I would say, if you are willing to learn French, do it, you've got nothing to lose, but I would say that learning French would definetly be a plus if you want to remain in Quebec.
SNH Posted April 2, 2017 Posted April 2, 2017 Hello everyone, I have been admitted to McGill, also waiting for other offers but most likely will go to McGill. I applied to graduate student housing. I don't know if that is guaranteed .... Should I also be looking elsewhere for housing? I will also move in summer probably in August. thanks!
AC290 Posted April 6, 2017 Posted April 6, 2017 Hey everyone! I got into MScPH @ McGill. Looking for roommate(s)+apartments, I want to move sometime in August. I'm from US (cleveland). I'm just barely able to understand French (6+ classes but no in-situ practice), eager to learn though. Used to being in foreign environment so down to live in any part of the city as long as its walking distance to transit. Not trying to pay more than 500$, hoping for 300-400 since it may take a second to find a part time gig. Am I being unrealistic?
Adelaide9216 Posted April 10, 2017 Posted April 10, 2017 I was thinking of moving out as well (I attend McGill) but all across the board, I was told that graduate housing is not worth it, that it would be more profitable for you to just have a regular appartement in the city.
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