Evan_D said:
I know that being fluent in French is a requirement and RMC is bilingual.
1. Being fluent in French is NOT a requirement. Many of the people I attended RMC with couldn't speak French to save their lives when they entered in first year. No matter how bilingual you are, you have to take the proficiency test and get yourself a second language profile, which rates your second language proficiency in the categories of "reading, writing, and oral". The levels of proficiency in each category which you can achieve (from lowest to highest) are X - A - B - C - E. If you took a test in your native language, you would get E-E-E, most people who only did core French in school would probably get a mix of X's and A's. To achieve "officially bilingual" status and succeed in the "bilingual" component of RMC, you need to get at least a B-B-B profile.
2. RMC is bilingual. Officially yes. In practice, only half true. Yes, they offer courses in both English and French, and they divide the semesters into French weeks and English weeks. During French weeks, you are suppose to do all correspondence and official business (including talking to Sqn/Div comds) in French. If you are a student commander (Top 4, Cadet Sqn Commander, Cadet Section Commander, etc) you are technically suppose to talk to all of your subordinates in French. However, this.. never.. happens (periods added for emphasis).
Evan_D said:
The recruiter that I spoke to said that i would not need to take French language proficiency (if i proved that i was competent) and could try apply as French applicant and take courses in English once entering. My two question are do French applicants have a better percentage (he said he would try to find answer but has not responded) and is this unethical. Thanks for the help
3. You have an official "first language" and an official "second language" at RMC, and you are allowed (and in fact, encouraged) to take classes in your second language. If you enroll claiming French as your "first language" (which clearly, it isn't), and then take all your courses in English, I believe this would be unethical, but that just MHO.
Cheers.