this post was submitted on 10 Mar 2024
1 points (100.0% liked)

/r/Denmark

153 readers
1 users here now

GÅ TIL FEDDIT.DK

Kommentarerne du skriver her sendes ikke tilbage til Reddit.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I'm a 17-year-old senior in high school right now. I'm currently taking pre-calculus and plan on studying calculus in college so that I can eventually teach it.

Does anyone know if either pre-calculus or AP calculus are taught in Danish high schools (gymnasium)? If either subject is taught in high school, I'd like to teach there.

My other option is to teach calculus on the college level, which I don't mind, but I would have to further my education in order to become a professor.

This also might be a stupid question or sound like I'm disconnected, but are any school courses besides English taught in English? I'm learning Danish, but I know I'd have to learn a lot of technical language, especially considering that it's math.

Tak! :)


Dette indlæg blev automatisk arkiveret af Leddit-botten. Vil du diskutere tråden? Tilmeld dig på feddit.dk!

The original was posted on /r/denmark by /u/IndicationSpecial344 at 2024-03-10 15:47:24+00:00.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago (1 children)

LtSaLT at 2024-03-10 17:44:12+00:00 ID: ku8wyyc


The visa you are quoting there is the "Start-up scheme" which is for people who want to start a business in Denmark, so not really relevant for someone wanting to become a teacher.

The regular work visa requires you to have received a job offer in Denmark before applying/moving. Essentially, an employer needs to sponsor your visa and tell the government, "we will hire this person", that's the basis on which a work visa is granted.

It's obviously going to be pretty difficult to get a school to hire you and sponsor your visa, if you have never lived in Denmark, no proof of Danish skills and only degrees from foreign countries.

I honestly think the easiest path would be a student visa and getting your university degree in Denmark, you would then have a Danish degree and the student visa would allow you to search for jobs while actually living in the country.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 7 months ago

IndicationSpecial344 (OP) at 2024-03-10 17:46:50+00:00 ID: ku8xgtn


Ya, I realized from someone else's comment that the startup thing isn't applicable to me.

I'm not really sure how I could manage to get a sponsorship from a school, especially considering the lack of having lived in Denmark and lack of Danish proficiency.