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Canadian Immigration and Citizenship

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Presentation on theme: "Canadian Immigration and Citizenship"— Presentation transcript:

1 Canadian Immigration and Citizenship

2 Historical Waves of Immigration to Canada
1st refugees to Canada: Empire Loyalists from USA Chinese workers came to work on railway system

3 Historical Waves of Immigration to Canada
6th Wave 7th Wave 8th Wave 5th Wave

4 Becoming a Canadian Citizen
If you want to become a Canadian citizen, you must follow several steps: Determine if you are eligible to become a citizen. Apply for citizenship. Take the citizenship test, if you are between the ages of 18 and 54. Attend a citizenship ceremony, if you are 14 or older

5 Who Can Apply to Be A Citizen?
To be eligible to become a Canadian citizen, you must meet the requirements in all of the following areas: Age (+18) Permanent resident status Time lived in Canada (3 years) Language abilities (English or French) Criminal history (none) Knowledge of Canada (citizenship test)

6 Citizenship Ceremony

7 Questions from the Canadian Citizenship Test
Take the Canadian citizenship test and see if you can get these 20 sample questions correct. Would you be able to Immigrate into Canada if you had to? Did you pass?????

8 Issue – Where do Immigrants Settle in Canada?????
Using your textbook, read pages 216 – 217 on the issue of Where Immigrants Settle in Canada. When you are done reading the two pages, answer the following questions at the bottom of page 217. Questions: #1, 2 and 3.

9 Five Common Myths about Immigration:
Myth 1: “Immigrants steal our jobs.” Fact: Immigrants actually create more jobs than take away. Many are self employed and often create jobs for other Canadians

10 Five Common Myths about Immigration:
Myth 2: “Canada doesn’t need immigrants- we’re fine without them.” Fact: Canada’s birth rate is declining and our population is aging. Immigrants provide Canadian businesses and industries with more workers and therefore this helps our economy. Myth 3: “They don’t have the skills and education to be successful in Canada.” Fact: Most immigrants who come to Canada are independent, well educated, and have skills that make them successful in Canada.

11 Five Common Myths about Immigration:
Myth 4: “Immigrants commit more crimes.” Fact: The rate of crime for newcomers is actually half the rate of those who were born in Canada. Myth 5: “Immigration weakens our national identity.” Fact: Multiculturalism helps promote Canadian identity that we as a country are culturally diverse, interesting and a vibrant place to live.

12 Top 10 source countries for immigrants coming to Canada Historically (up until 1981):
United Kingdom Italy U.S. Germany Portugal Netherlands India Poland China Countries of the former Yugoslavia

13 Immigration Patterns In Canada

14 The Top 10 countries of origin for immigrants to Canada between 2001 and 2006
China - 155,105 India - 129,140 Philippines - 77,880 Pakistan - 57,630 United States - 38,770 South Korea - 35,450 Romania - 28,080 Iran - 27,600 United Kingdom - 25,655 Colombia - 25,310 Between 2001 and 2006, Canada admitted 1.1 million immigrants. For the first time in 75 years, one in five Canadian residents were born outside the country. Canada's per-capita immigration rate is roughly double that of the United States.


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