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Posts by delphiandomine  

Joined: 25 Nov 2008 / Male ♂
Warnings: 1 - Q
Last Post: 17 Feb 2021
Threads: Total: 86 / In This Archive: 69
Posts: Total: 17823 / In This Archive: 12419
From: Poznań, Poland
Speaks Polish?: Yeah.
Interests: law, business

Displayed posts: 12488 / page 415 of 417
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delphiandomine   
11 Sep 2009
Life / Driving test, English speaking driving school in Warsaw? [95]

Why do you want to sit the B1 licence to begin with?

From what I know, sitting the B1 licence is virtually impossible in Poland if you don't speak the language - because it's nearly impossible to find something in the B1 category that can accomodate you, the examiner and a sworn translator. There are English speaking schools, but as B1 is a somewhat esoteric licence to obtain, I think you'll struggle to find a school that has the relevant vehicles AND offers English tuition.

Why not just wait a year?
delphiandomine   
9 Sep 2009
News / RHD cars in Poland - my campaign to change the rules in Poland [128]

Yes but have you tried to get permission from the Ministry of Transport to register your car. As far as I know the situation, the EU are not willing to get involved unless/until they have information that it is not possible to register RHD cars in Poland.

The situation's changed anyway - Poland has now agreed to recognise foreign car test certificates and to allow registration of them based on that. thenews.pl is down, but a date of late September is mentioned on there...

It would be *very* interesting if Poland continues to deny RHD cars with valid test documentation...
delphiandomine   
9 Sep 2009
Life / Prices of cars in Poland? [88]

With the impending change in the law to recognise foreign test certificates for the car, it's likely that second hand car prices will go down quite a bit - especially as it should now be possible to register RHD cars with none of the fuss from before.
delphiandomine   
4 Sep 2009
Law / What can I do with 250000$? [33]

Funny, the Poznan one is still going strong and isn't looking like closing anytime soon.

Warsaw needs a good English bookshop, not a small mom and pop shop, but a whole floor of a department store...or that kind of size...

Would there really be the demand in Poland for that sort of thing when most people's needs can be met by Empik or likewise?
delphiandomine   
30 Aug 2009
Work / Advice on Teaching English in Poland [709]

I have another question. Part of an exchange program I will be getting another chance in November to come there in Poland. Again, I will work as an English teacher. This time it will be for 1 year.

Is this paid employment, or is this academic?

After completing 1 year my visa will be expired so I’m thinking of finding another job as an English teacher, luckily if I get, I will extend my visa. So will it be easy for me to find a job there after having 2 years of experience? I prefer working in private School.

No. You'll still have the problem of trying to get a visa - you'll be competing against native speakers (and indeed, Polish nationals) who don't require the school to sponsor their visa. This is where the crucial difference is - it's just not worth the hassle or the time for the school to sponsor your visa.

There's also the issue that as an Indian national, you'll have to be flawless - and I can see that you're making several mistakes in your written English. You really will have to be exceptional for a school to take a chance on you - or you'll have to work incredibly cheap.
delphiandomine   
28 Aug 2009
Work / Advice on Teaching English in Poland [709]

To be brutally honest, you don't have much hope in Poland. There is a mindset among many Poles that an Indian teacher just doesn't have the right accent or way of speaking - and while you might have got on fine with an exchange programme, it's a different story with paid employment.

It's also incredibly unlikely that any school will go to the effort of sponsoring your visa - they can get Brits/Irish/Australians/Americans without needing to sponsor a visa and they have the benefit of seeing them in person first - you don't have that luxury, I'm afraid.

It's simply not worth the hassle for schools - English speakers aren't difficult to find here, and customers wouldn't be too happy with someone that they percieved to be inferior.
delphiandomine   
27 Aug 2009
Work / TEFL Jobs in Poland - your success story? [16]

Going there and handing it over face to face, without a shadow of a doubt. The TEFL employment websites are as good as useless in my opinion, I don't know anyone that's actually landed a job through one - or at least a job that's worth doing.
delphiandomine   
11 Aug 2009
Law / Can I take the Polish written test and obtain a Polish driving licence? [28]

Wojewódzki Ośrodek Ruchu Drogowego w Poznaniu
ul. Wilczak 53
61-623 Poznań
61 829 01 80

Call them and ask them if you need a PESEL to sit a driving test. They'll say 'yes'. End of story.

De facto, someone with the required residency papers will have a PESEL. Why do you keep trying to insist on proof of this? It may very well be that other driving centres (particularly in Warsaw) are being more flexible, but if you can't put a PESEL on the form, then they won't accept it in Poznan.
delphiandomine   
10 Aug 2009
Law / Can I take the Polish written test and obtain a Polish driving licence? [28]

You still have not offered any evidence to back up your claims. So far you just repeated what I have posted. It in no way, shape or form confirm that a PESEL is needed or referenced to.

Why don't you call Poznan WORD and ask them for yourself? The information I have came straight from the horses mouth there.

But other people are suggesting that the relevant residency documents are enough - although anyone with them should have a PESEL generated for them automatically anyway (though I'm not certain if non-EU citizens will have it done?) . The exception may be Polish non-residents - but they'll be obliged to gain an ID card when they move to Poland anyway, thus a PESEL will be generated there too.

Oh, and there's the simple fact that the application form *asks* for it. While individual offices may be doing things differently, it's still asked for officially.

The information I have provided in an earlier posting states 'reamining in Poland for at least 185 days in each calender year in consideration of work or personal ties. Nowhere does it state that I will need a PESEL. It just mentions 'To obtain a Polish driving licence an EU citizen should'...

Groan...

You'll have to obtain the relevant residency documents to fufil the 185 days criteria. It's not enough to have a EU passport and a contract for 9 months work - you need to be legally resident in Poland under the 5 year stamp for EU citizens. Once you fufil all the criteria, you'll have a PESEL automatically generated, which will be requested on the application form.

Since I am an EU citizen with an opportunity to work in Poland, enough said. The work opportunity will have me meet the requirements of the 185 days fairly easily. Since I will meet those requirements, then I can go for a driver's licence in Poland.

You really don't understand the residency situation, do you?

Poland has a system where you must legalise your stay within 4 days of arrival on the territory of the RP. For EU citizens, this process can be abused because no-one cares less - BUT - certain things depend on having legal residency. You can live and work here happily without having a registered address, but certain things are barred to you, and one of those things is obtaining a driving licence.

You have to be in possession of the EU 5 year residency permit in Poland in order to sit a driving test. You'll only get this once you've been here for 3 months already, and the process can take quite a while as it involves police checks and so on. Once you've done all this, a PESEL will be automatically registered for you - and the driving licence application form explictly asks for it. They may be able to override it - but I stress may, and it'll be up to the discretion of each driving centre. They also won't override the requirement to have valid residency documents - because these are the proof that you've been here for 185 days.

So please provide evidence to back up your claims insteading of trying to twist other postings to suit your own ends. Until such time, I will take the information I have printed out from the website I have mentioned as truth. And you are able to read that website in regards to what I have mentioned. Nowhere does it state anything about a PESEl.

I suggest that instead of relying on websites that may be incorrect, you rely on what they're actually *practicing* in Poland. You certainly won't get very far in Poland by waving English-language information around.

You do also know that Poland has mandatory 30 hours of theory learning and 30 hours of driving practice before you can take a test? Even if you only need the theory part, you'll still have to do the 30 hours before you can take the test.
delphiandomine   
10 Aug 2009
Law / Can I take the Polish written test and obtain a Polish driving licence? [28]

Unless you have an inside source. I have provided info Delphiandomine. Please back up yours, so we all can understand where you are coming from.

It's straight from Poznan WORD, so it can't really be more authoritative than that. They simply won't accept an application to sit the test if you don't have the number. But of course, other places may interpret it differently.

However, from what I know about driving tests in the Arab world, I'd be surprised if the holder of a UAE license would be able to take only the written part of the Polish test. I'd be expecting them to also have to take the practical test too.

I wonder if Poland has an agreement with the UAE to allow a year on the UAE licence?

5. Remain in the territory of Poland for at least 185 days in each calendar year in consideration of his/her personal or professional ties, or present a certificate evidencing that he/she has been studying in Poland for at least the past 6 months.

What you've said here actually backs up the PESEL point - to be legally in Poland for 185 days/year, you'll have to prove that you have legal residency. So while you might not actually *need* the number, one will probably be generated for you regardless once you legalise your stay.

After checking with a test centre in Poland I am still unsure what is acceptable as staying in Poland for 185 days and having a personal contact is. This was the requirement for obtaining a Polish driving licence after passing the written exam for a non european citizen.
Can you just rent a flat for six months for instance and thus qualify as staying for six months and then take the test...

Basically, you have to have either the residence card for non-EU citizens or the 5 year EU residency stamp. Renting a flat/etc won't be enough - you'll have to have legal residence in Poland for that period of time.

I'm not sure if they'll be so strict as to enforce the 'you must be here for at least 185 days' rule in terms of sitting the test before 185 days, but you must be here legally and for more than 185 days.
delphiandomine   
9 Aug 2009
Law / Can I take the Polish written test and obtain a Polish driving licence? [28]

Good Luck and please look into this. From my understanding this, if I were to get a job teaching ESL and can proof that I will be there for more than 185 days and am an EU citizen then I can apply for a licence.

The defining factor is that you have to have a PESEL to get a driving licence in Poland - if you don't have this, then you won't get a licence.
delphiandomine   
9 Aug 2009
Law / Can I take the Polish written test and obtain a Polish driving licence? [28]

I understand you need to be resident in the UK for three years before applying for a driving licence and was hoping Poland did not have this type of requirement.

Not true - as long as you're living in the UK, you can obtain a driving licence. There's no systematic register of who lives where in the UK (at least for the moment!) - so a driving licence is easily obtainable by anyone who lives legally in the UK.
delphiandomine   
6 Aug 2009
Life / Wholesale beer prices in Poland [10]

Indeed, if the total turnover of the business is less than a certain threshold (about EUR15,000 or so), there is no need to charge VAT, which should cut the price even more.

It won't cut the price, because you'll have to pay VAT on the purchase with no prospect of a refund. You wouldn't have to charge VAT on the sale - but any advantage is lost with having to pay VAT to the Polish side of things.

Plus you'll have to have the money to pay the excise taxes upfront - the latest thing I found is saying that you'll pay around 1EUR per bottle of your average Polish beer. Let's say you can get the stuff for 0.60EUR a bottle - you're upto 1.60EUR up front before you even consider transportation costs.
delphiandomine   
25 Jul 2009
Work / Advice on Teaching English in Poland [709]

Thank you for the information, can you think of any schools close to Kings Cross/the Stadium that I should try first.

Hmm...I live in Rataje, so I'm not very familiar with that side of the city - my suggestion is to type 'jezyk szkola poznan' into google and go from there :) I know there's a few schools around Mickiewicza, but these aren't really 'close'.

I have never heard of the "direct method schools" do you know a website that has a listing of them with an address?

I don't know of any, but basically, any school advertising Callan or any method that doesn't have coursebooks will be the direct method. The money isn't so good at these schools, but they involve *much* less preparation - in fact, you can pretty much get away with turning up 15 minutes before the class without actually having seen the material before.

I am currently working with public transportation (a first for me) but I'm figuring it out so it should be easy to get around. Also, I don't know what a CV is? Is that like a resume??

Yep, CV/Resume, same thing :) In Poland, they'll also expect a cover letter (or motivation letter, as they call it here) and a photograph with the CV.

As for public transport - pick up a KomKarta and load it with a monthly pass - it makes life much, much easier as there's no hassle with validating tickets :)
delphiandomine   
25 Jul 2009
Work / Advice on Teaching English in Poland [709]

It's *very* rare for schools to actually advertise for teachers in Poznan - don't wait to see advertisements, you'll have to go out there armed with copies of your CV and convince your way into meeting the directors in person. If I'm right, you might not need to get a work permit if you're here based on marriage, so stress this when talking to potential directors as most will assume that you need a work permit. There's a *lot* of schools in Poznan, and it shouldn't be hard for you to get something.

What I'd personally recommend is going for one of the 'direct method' schools - they're a nice introduction to teaching, and they should be quite happy to take you on without any formal qualifications.

I'm in Poznan, so I can give you advice about teaching here :)
delphiandomine   
23 Jul 2009
Work / I want to move to Poland (but of course we need to find a good job) [117]

..the same with one ex-President of Poland...the fact that he ended up being a President didn't count for a jot, because....because he didn't have a Masters.

He lied about it, though - considering Walesa didn't have a Masters either (as far as I know...), it wouldn't have mattered - but to lie about it is another story.
delphiandomine   
23 Jul 2009
Work / I want to move to Poland (but of course we need to find a good job) [117]

It is not to the Master's level...they claim this but it is actually a drawn out 4-year degree. It is pretty obvious why this is done.

More and more courses and universities are moving to the 3+2 model as a result of the Bologna Process. So an MSc/MA/Mwhatever obtained today will more than likely be a true Masters degree.

As for it being 'pretty obvious why it's done' - tell me why most of Europe was using this system before the Bologna Process? In fact, some Magister degrees are 5 years and not 4 - and these are close to an actual Masters.

It is sad however, that once they have obtained the Masters degree (be it Masters or 1 4yr drawn out degree) they end up working at the tills in large supermarkets.

The problem is that the Masters element is available to everyone. Anyone with an interest in education will tell you that it's clearly nonsense (where the Masters part is seperate) for people to get onto the M level without a decent grade in the Batchelor level - but Poland seems to be struggling to come to terms with the fact that the amount of people who have a Masters must fall - possibly because they'll have a lot of expensive staff doing nothing until they retire.

But I think part of the blame has to lie at the way that Polish students don't embrace relevant work experience, partially because some universities have worthless placements.

With the exception of technical or practical fields most degrees are worthless. Every other person here has a degree in "Pedagogy" or "Business" or some other such worthless ********.

What's different from the Yankee homeland? I'd say most degrees handed out to athletes on scholarships (something that's banned in the EU) are worthless from the US.
delphiandomine   
23 Jul 2009
Work / I want to move to Poland (but of course we need to find a good job) [117]

Most uni people go through to 5 years of study at uni, studying to masters level. I think they feel inferior to each other if they don’t do this 

I'd blame this squarely on the fact that the old system of Magister degrees (pre-Bologna) were first degrees, yet took 5 years. Now that it's changed into 3+2, they desperately need to start culling people after 3 years.

It's ridiculous that someone can obtain a Masters degree despite getting the lowest grade the whole way through.

However, the government has plans in this respect, starting by stopping free 'second' degrees that many people do.

* Beracracy is a mother ****** compared to the uk.

I'd actually argue that the UK is becoming worse than Poland in some respects. The move towards faceless offices with officials that can't be contacted is getting worse and worse in the UK - just try and get hold of a decision maker with the Identity and Passport Service, for instance. The call centres for them are outsourced and the staff follow scripts - and the hassle invovled to actually get a first passport is becoming worse and worse. They're cutting all the local tax offices, they've shut most local benefit offices and the Jobcentre is absolutely useless for all but routine form filling.
delphiandomine   
22 Jul 2009
Law / Can a student go in any other Schengen country with a Polish National Visa (D) [46]

i already have a polish visa D but i dot want to study in Poland i prefer studying in Norway ,Denmark or Sweden

Why did you obtain a visa for Poland if you don't want to study there?

I will repeat this - do not attempt to enter Sweden on the D visa in order to study. It's valid for 5 days (I think...) to transit through Schengen countries to reach Poland - but it isn't valid for EU travel. You'll need a Swedish/Norwegian/Danish visa for that, or a short term Schengen visa.

If you're caught, then as a visa national, you'll probably face a lengthy ban from Schengen.
delphiandomine   
21 Jul 2009
Law / Can a student go in any other Schengen country with a Polish National Visa (D) [46]

Best bet is to contact the Polish embassy (or whoever Poland has an agreement with) in your own country and ask there. I don't see why not, but you'll have to meet the immigration restrictions for that country.

Whatever you do, don't attempt to travel in other Schengen countries without a valid visa.
delphiandomine   
21 Jul 2009
Law / Can a student go in any other Schengen country with a Polish National Visa (D) [46]

NO you cannot study anywhere else other than in Poland on a Polish visa. If you want to study in Sweden, then get a visa for Sweden.

Yep, to add to this - those category D visas are not 'Schengen' visas - they're still national-only visas. They haven't harmonised the long term visas across the Schengen zone yet (and perhaps never will, which is why you see the Straż Graniczna pulling non-whites).

I've no idea if you can apply for a Swedish visa in Poland, but I don't see why not.