Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure if that is the case, to either of the last two Anonymous' who replied.
Firstly, under normal circumstances I'm pretty sure, regardless of country, in order to work as an au pair you'll need to find a host family and arrange for papers like qualifications, diplomas etc. to confirm you eligibility as an au pair.
However, if you've already worked as an au pair in this given country (USA, Norway etc.) and you have a residence permit in said country, these rules logically wouldn't apply. This is what I'm trying to confirm.
Just to clarify: when you first apply to work as an au au pair you don't have a residence permit; instead you must arrange for other papers such as the host family you're going to work for, diplomas, other qualifications etc.
When you've previously worked in a given country you already have a residence permit, which I'd imagine would make it acceptable to return to that country to work as an au pair again until his/her residence permit expires.
In this case that would be November, 2014.
Thanks for trying to help me by the way, I really appreciate it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I sent an email to them on Saturday, unfortunately it can take up to 10 days to get a response.
I'll try to call them tomorrow, however.
I know that Anonymous, I wouldn't trust anonymous strangers concerning something like this either, but I'd still like to know if they have any information on the subject, any at all, no matter how dubious.
For the sake of argument picture the same scenario only the country is USA, not Norway; would anyone of you know then?
It would not work in the US, because all au pairs have to go thru an agency. It would be illegal to au pair without one.
Anonymous wrote:I sent an email to them on Saturday, unfortunately it can take up to 10 days to get a response.
I'll try to call them tomorrow, however.
I know that Anonymous, I wouldn't trust anonymous strangers concerning something like this either, but I'd still like to know if they have any information on the subject, any at all, no matter how dubious.
For the sake of argument picture the same scenario only the country is USA, not Norway; would anyone of you know then?
Anonymous wrote:I understand that Anonymous.
Even so I'd still like to know of any and all information that pertains to this particular question.
Anonymous wrote:Hey, I have a friend who worked as an au pair in Norway, quit and then returned to her home country.
However she now wants to return to Norway and work as an au pair for a couple of months.
Her residence permit (the residence permit issued by the police station in the region she was working) is still valid until November, 2014.
Can she legally go back to Norway and work as an au pair until her residence permit expires?
Anonymous wrote:I will, but its an urgent matter I'd like to resolve as soon as possible
Anonymous wrote:Regardless do you have any personal experience or information that pertains to this in a more general sense, regardless of country?
I would really appreciate it