本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛I didn't go to ESL myself, so I cannot tell you if ESL will solve your problem. You will need definitely invest a lot of time to practice and improve your language skill. For immigrants from China, they are especially weak at listening and speaking. You don't have any shortcut to getting yourself fluent on a foreign language.
If you don't want to feel the pressure of making a living while studying English, you can choose to stay in China before you have improved a lot. It is hard to improve language skills while you have to worry about your rental every month.
Mastering English is not a guarantee for finding a professinal job. But, lack of language skill is almost equivalent to not being able to find such a job. There are many factors influencing job seeking. Besides language skill, your professional skill itself is also very important. Many employers prefer you to have Canadian experience, although it is not required by law. This is a barrier for new comers who don't have local experience at all. Some can manage to find a professional job directly. For those who can't, they can have many other choices. The key is to make some social link locally. Going to school, do volunteer work, co-op, working for a small company for a poor pay first, etc. There are many ways to build up the local experience.
It is sometimes frustrating for new comers. The point is, do you want to get out of China? If you don't like that society (society is different concept than country), it is worthwhile to have a try.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
If you don't want to feel the pressure of making a living while studying English, you can choose to stay in China before you have improved a lot. It is hard to improve language skills while you have to worry about your rental every month.
Mastering English is not a guarantee for finding a professinal job. But, lack of language skill is almost equivalent to not being able to find such a job. There are many factors influencing job seeking. Besides language skill, your professional skill itself is also very important. Many employers prefer you to have Canadian experience, although it is not required by law. This is a barrier for new comers who don't have local experience at all. Some can manage to find a professional job directly. For those who can't, they can have many other choices. The key is to make some social link locally. Going to school, do volunteer work, co-op, working for a small company for a poor pay first, etc. There are many ways to build up the local experience.
It is sometimes frustrating for new comers. The point is, do you want to get out of China? If you don't like that society (society is different concept than country), it is worthwhile to have a try.更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net