Quebec is kind of an anomaly. They have a completely different high school/post-secondary system than the rest of North America. Tuition tends to be cheaper.
On the flip side, wages also tend to be lower. It's kind of a trap as you’re trained in your French mother tongue, but also only have skills that are useful in a closed, small, socialist market.
The Quebecois can escape, but it involves leaving their culture for the mostly unilingual rest of the continent. And most bilingual work is going to be in the federal civil service or academia, which is really frying pan/fire.
Teachers in English Canada are paid much better AFAIK. They can max out around 100k pretty quickly with some seniority & skill upgrading. The problem is that the working conditions are similarly atrocious. And tons of diversity are being poured even into the bougiest of schools daily.
Quebec is kind of an anomaly. They have a completely different high school/post-secondary system than the rest of North America. Tuition tends to be cheaper.
On the flip side, wages also tend to be lower. It's kind of a trap as you’re trained in your French mother tongue, but also only have skills that are useful in a closed, small, socialist market.
The Quebecois can escape, but it involves leaving their culture for the mostly unilingual rest of the continent. And most bilingual work is going to be in the federal civil service or academia, which is really frying pan/fire.
Teachers in English Canada are paid much better AFAIK. They can max out around 100k pretty quickly with some seniority & skill upgrading. The problem is that the working conditions are similarly atrocious. And tons of diversity are being poured even into the bougiest of schools daily.