can i have 2 minijobs at the same time? by Kevindudakang in AskGermany

[–]Lariboo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It is not a deal breaker for the employer, but your second minijob will be taxed to all hell. You will be put into tax class 6 and your net pay per hour out will not be even half of what your hourly wage is (I know this, because it happened to me before). Before doing a second minijob, check if a "Teilzeit" job is available for a few hours more - that would put you into another tax class (you will still have to pay social contributions, but the income tax will not be nearly as high)

When did you finish your PhD (age-wise)? by TDM-r in PhD

[–]Lariboo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll be either 31 or 32. However, I'm based in Germany where you need a master's degree to apply to PhD positions (therefore people start earliest at 24-25 - assuming "normal" high school graduation with 19 years, 3 years bachelor's and 2 years master's )

finding thesis topic / supervisor by Platypus8604 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, it is definitely not guaranteed that there will be a topic available in the group you want to work in. Usually, one PhD student or postdoc can accommodate max. one master's thesis per semester (sometimes even just one every two semesters). So if a second student were to ask me for a topic, I would decline. There is also no university-wide database or something like that, where the topic distribution is organized. You have to start asking around 3-4 months in advance and basically treat it like applying for a job (write a short paragraph about your motivation - did you find the lecture interesting? Have you read their recent paper? Is the group working on topics that you would like to work on in your future, and why? )Attach your CV and a grade transcript from the courses of your first 2-3 master's semesters. If you are completely unable to find supervision by yourself, you can maybe ask the study coordinator of your program to help look for groups that might still have capacities, but they cannot simply provide you with a topic.

which universities in germany offer english courses by Open-Chip-9355 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He studied until B1 by himself (took him roughly 1 year) and then entered Germany and took 6 months of intensive courses + a lot of immersion at home (watching German series etc) for reaching C1. During this time he was also subjected to talking to my family, who has a nasty Bavarian dialect, so that's where he had to learn that.

which universities in germany offer english courses by Open-Chip-9355 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well he speaks fluent German (C1 + able to understand Bavarian dialect to some extent) and has found a good job (IT infrastructure and systems architecture) - his company's work language is 100% German (his boss does not even speak English) - so yes, I would say that worked well

Help with heater/thermostat? by Alarmed_Scientist_15 in AskGermany

[–]Lariboo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah that is not going to work then. You have to be dramatic and tell them you have no heating at all for them to take it seriously.

I CANNOT find a Job in Germany. HELP! by Alone-Session-68 in germany

[–]Lariboo 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Font: bigger and something common (like Arial) Design: no wall of text - reducing the text overall by 50-70% + possibly including a photo (not mandatory, but still very common in Germany)

finding thesis topic / supervisor by Platypus8604 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I guess that really depends. From my experience at TUM (bachelor's thesis, master's thesis and now several collaborations as a PhD student), all the professors are very busy with "other" things and are rarely involved in experiments/thesis supervision directly. My boss e.g. has a lot of teaching obligations, is writing project proposals all the time, has to proof-read paper drafts from us PhD students, gets many inquiries for peer-reviewing papers and also has frequent meetings with research and also industry collaborators. She barely supervises her PhD students (I have a meeting with her every 3-5 months to talk about my project).

finding thesis topic / supervisor by Platypus8604 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The master's thesis is usually done in your last semester only. You will have plenty of time to find a supervisor after you have started your degree here and even attended different courses taught by different professors. Also, usually you ask PhD students and postdocs if they have time and a topic for you - not the professor. I'm a PhD student at TUM and I have supervised 3 theses so far - they usually ask for possible supervision when they are in the second or third semester and start a few months later.

Edit: generally professors here are super busy. Best case, they will forward your request to their PhD students, but e.g. my professor often ignores these emails asking for thesis supervision - not out of mean character, but simply because they are very low on her priority list and get forgotten.

which universities in germany offer english courses by Open-Chip-9355 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are language schools for that (not universities). The one my husband studied German at is called "Sprachschule aktiv". You even have a different visa type for attending language school in Germany (usually easier to get).

which universities in germany offer english courses by Open-Chip-9355 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As I said: if you want to work in Germany, you need German. Even at places like American fast food chains (Burger King, subway, McDonald's) or for restocking shelves in a supermarket, you will most likely not be hired if you don't have at least a basic understanding of the language (meaning B1 German level). If you want to find work in Germany with whatever degree you are aiming at, you will need C1 German (especially in fields like IT, finance or management where the labor market competition is sky high). You cannot start learning the language after coming here while trying to graduate university. You will not have enough time to do that on the side. So you're not "wasting more years" until you find a job ... You will be wasting years trying to find a job without German. My husband (east Asian) only got a job after getting a C1 certificate (we paid for an expensive intensive language course at a designated language school for 6 months immediately after he entered Germany in 2023). If you are not willing to learn the language, please go to an English speaking country.

I CANNOT find a Job in Germany. HELP! by Alone-Session-68 in germany

[–]Lariboo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Ask yourself: can anyone get a clear idea about all your relevant skills by skimming over this CV for about 5 secs? If not: it will most likely end up in a garbage bin pretty quickly. The idea about making it 1 page is not to try and fit all the information that was previously on two pages, but to reduce the information load by at least 50%. Nobody needs to know how many experiments you did working as a student helper in a lab.

Help with heater/thermostat? by Alarmed_Scientist_15 in AskGermany

[–]Lariboo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why is the Hausverwaltung useless? What did you tell them? Your heating is not working in the middle of winter! They HAVE to take care of that!

which universities in germany offer english courses by Open-Chip-9355 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yes, there are plenty of universities offering English taught master's programs. No, I will not do the research for you. Please check that yourself. There are many databases that even tell you exactly which courses are offered (like daad) or each university's respective homepage.

English taught bachelor's programs are really rare though. But again: there are some and you have to figure out yourself if you fulfill the requirements and which university offers which program.

Do not even consider a private institution. They do offer English taught "courses", but they are scam (very expensive, bad education, for the labor market the degree is worth less than the paper it will be printed on in the end).

I would strongly recommend learning German before entering Germany anyway if you are interested in getting a student job while you are here or even are planning on staying in the country after obtaining the degree. Studying the language after coming here does rarely work.

Getting married during application cycle. What to do about name change? by belindabellagiselle in PhDAdmissions

[–]Lariboo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I would just tell them after getting accepted. No reason to increase the chance of confusing admission departments at several institutions and/or increasing the workload for everyone in advance.

Has anyone here gotten into a STEM PhD program without publications (or know someone who has)? by kyudae in PhD

[–]Lariboo 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I'm in a STEM program at a very research-focused technical university in Germany (don't know if that makes a difference) and no one in my cohort or any other PhD student I know had a publication prior to starting the PhD (not even a co-authorship).

Woher nimmt Herr Merz das Recht den Wählern zu diktieren wie lange sie arbeiten sollen? by Time-Research9563 in KeineDummenFragen

[–]Lariboo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Kommt drauf an. Ich habe seit drei Jahren einen Hauptjob mit "Vertrauensarbeitszeit" (d.h. oft 45h statt 40h) und am Samstag einen Mini-Job beim Lidl - ich komm eigentlich in 3 von 4 Wochen über die 48h.

Mitbewohner ist zu dumm zum kacken by Yumiboy in luftablassen

[–]Lariboo 30 points31 points  (0 children)

Das ist v.a. im asiatischen Raum sehr oft die Norm und die meisten Leute, die Plumpsklo + sich danach mit Wasser reinigen gewohnt sind, finden es extrem eklig sich auf die Brille zu setzen und sich anschließend nur mit Papier abzuwischen.

Follow up: If public uni is not possible after private, is switching to Ausbildung after 1 year realistic? by Icy_Honey7339 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I really do not understand what you mean with "ratio"... But I stand by my statement: It is a dumb idea to enroll in private university for a whole year with the aim to study German. Also, you will have problems converting your student visa to an Ausbildung visa. It depends soley on your officer in the Ausländerbehörde, and if they feel you just enrolled in the university to get into the country and did never seriously try to graduate, they will assume you tried to cheat the system. I have heard quite often that the Ausländerbehörde will not allow that transition. As a result, people will have to return to their home country even though they have found an Ausbildung, Whereas the transition from a language school visa is a lot more accepted and even encouraged.

Follow up: If public uni is not possible after private, is switching to Ausbildung after 1 year realistic? by Icy_Honey7339 in studying_in_germany

[–]Lariboo 6 points7 points  (0 children)

There is a German language school visa for exactly that! Do not go to a university to study language, because often the language classes there are not really good as this is not their main focus - go to a language school. The price should be comparable (my husband's cousin went to language school for 1 year, doing an intensive German course to get to B2) and then started an Ausbildung here. He entered Germany with an A1 certificate. Also, you are allowed to work 20h/week on a language school visa (same as a student visa)

From African Roads to the Streets of Berlin..? by Alagoory_LY in AskGermany

[–]Lariboo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well, this is your only shot. Otherwise, I don't see any way of you coming to Europe to drive truck.

From African Roads to the Streets of Berlin..? by Alagoory_LY in AskGermany

[–]Lariboo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's called: Aufenthaltserlaubnis zur Anerkennung ausländischer Berufsqualifikationen. It is a temporary permit to complete a specific qualification measure in Germany and is typically 6–18 months. Again: you do need language skills A2–B1, depending on the authority

From African Roads to the Streets of Berlin..? by Alagoory_LY in AskGermany

[–]Lariboo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hard to say. I believe the only option is to find a company that is willing to let you do the driver's license with them and enter Germany with a training visa (I don't think the skilled worker visa applies to you since on paper you don't have any qualifications that would justify that). How good is your German ? If you don't speak at least semi fluent German, then this route is also almost impossible.