How to politely request for the interview to be conducted in English? [on hold]
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I speak both English and French Fluently. Yet, Since, I studied in a British University and the whole structure of my course was in English, I find it easier to answer all the technical questions in English. Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
interviewing
New contributor
put on hold as too broad by 385703, mxyzplk, sleske, gnat, Dmitry Grigoryev 12 hours ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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up vote
17
down vote
favorite
I speak both English and French Fluently. Yet, Since, I studied in a British University and the whole structure of my course was in English, I find it easier to answer all the technical questions in English. Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
interviewing
New contributor
put on hold as too broad by 385703, mxyzplk, sleske, gnat, Dmitry Grigoryev 12 hours ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
35
Where is the interview being conducted? I also find it much easier to communicate technical terms in English rather than my native language.
– rath
yesterday
32
What language is required for the job?
– Dukeling
yesterday
Is it possible that they want you to be able to answer technical questions in French for the job - e.g. if you are working with French speaking colleagues or customers/suppliers?
– colmde
16 hours ago
3
It seems to me it's rather relevant where this is taking place. I suspect there's a big difference between what place English has in the culture of France and that of Canada, for example.
– Jasper
15 hours ago
It it's a Frenchman, then they will probably insist on using French. That's my experience. For some reason, they are so proud/nationalist/... that they will, even if it does harm to them on other front (not getting the candidate, not selling you a service, etc.)
– Ondra Žižka
13 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
up vote
17
down vote
favorite
up vote
17
down vote
favorite
I speak both English and French Fluently. Yet, Since, I studied in a British University and the whole structure of my course was in English, I find it easier to answer all the technical questions in English. Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
interviewing
New contributor
I speak both English and French Fluently. Yet, Since, I studied in a British University and the whole structure of my course was in English, I find it easier to answer all the technical questions in English. Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
interviewing
interviewing
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked yesterday
raeesa D
9813
9813
New contributor
New contributor
put on hold as too broad by 385703, mxyzplk, sleske, gnat, Dmitry Grigoryev 12 hours ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
put on hold as too broad by 385703, mxyzplk, sleske, gnat, Dmitry Grigoryev 12 hours ago
Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
35
Where is the interview being conducted? I also find it much easier to communicate technical terms in English rather than my native language.
– rath
yesterday
32
What language is required for the job?
– Dukeling
yesterday
Is it possible that they want you to be able to answer technical questions in French for the job - e.g. if you are working with French speaking colleagues or customers/suppliers?
– colmde
16 hours ago
3
It seems to me it's rather relevant where this is taking place. I suspect there's a big difference between what place English has in the culture of France and that of Canada, for example.
– Jasper
15 hours ago
It it's a Frenchman, then they will probably insist on using French. That's my experience. For some reason, they are so proud/nationalist/... that they will, even if it does harm to them on other front (not getting the candidate, not selling you a service, etc.)
– Ondra Žižka
13 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
35
Where is the interview being conducted? I also find it much easier to communicate technical terms in English rather than my native language.
– rath
yesterday
32
What language is required for the job?
– Dukeling
yesterday
Is it possible that they want you to be able to answer technical questions in French for the job - e.g. if you are working with French speaking colleagues or customers/suppliers?
– colmde
16 hours ago
3
It seems to me it's rather relevant where this is taking place. I suspect there's a big difference between what place English has in the culture of France and that of Canada, for example.
– Jasper
15 hours ago
It it's a Frenchman, then they will probably insist on using French. That's my experience. For some reason, they are so proud/nationalist/... that they will, even if it does harm to them on other front (not getting the candidate, not selling you a service, etc.)
– Ondra Žižka
13 hours ago
35
35
Where is the interview being conducted? I also find it much easier to communicate technical terms in English rather than my native language.
– rath
yesterday
Where is the interview being conducted? I also find it much easier to communicate technical terms in English rather than my native language.
– rath
yesterday
32
32
What language is required for the job?
– Dukeling
yesterday
What language is required for the job?
– Dukeling
yesterday
Is it possible that they want you to be able to answer technical questions in French for the job - e.g. if you are working with French speaking colleagues or customers/suppliers?
– colmde
16 hours ago
Is it possible that they want you to be able to answer technical questions in French for the job - e.g. if you are working with French speaking colleagues or customers/suppliers?
– colmde
16 hours ago
3
3
It seems to me it's rather relevant where this is taking place. I suspect there's a big difference between what place English has in the culture of France and that of Canada, for example.
– Jasper
15 hours ago
It seems to me it's rather relevant where this is taking place. I suspect there's a big difference between what place English has in the culture of France and that of Canada, for example.
– Jasper
15 hours ago
It it's a Frenchman, then they will probably insist on using French. That's my experience. For some reason, they are so proud/nationalist/... that they will, even if it does harm to them on other front (not getting the candidate, not selling you a service, etc.)
– Ondra Žižka
13 hours ago
It it's a Frenchman, then they will probably insist on using French. That's my experience. For some reason, they are so proud/nationalist/... that they will, even if it does harm to them on other front (not getting the candidate, not selling you a service, etc.)
– Ondra Žižka
13 hours ago
|
show 1 more comment
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
up vote
54
down vote
Unless you are applying to a company which has a philosophy of using English as the company language, that request will likely get rejected.
The reason is that in today's workplace environment, social skills are even more valued than technical skills. It doesn't just matter how well you do things. It also matters how well you can explain what you are doing.
When you are working in a French company within a French team, for French customers and with French suppliers, then a very important part of your work will be to communicate in French. They need to judge your proficiency in this skill.
6
I wonder if the OP can do the interview in French, but refer to key terms in English by saying "as they say in English", (insert english term here, like DevOps, Factory pattern, Continuous Delivery) - especially if there are no direct french equivalents (Le Devops?). This way, they are playing by the interview rules and at the same time highlighting their english skills
– vikingsteve
17 hours ago
1
@vikingsteve the vast majority of technical terms are not translated, or just slightly, even when direct translation would be possible: DevOps => DevOps, Factory Pattern => paterne factory, refactor => refactorer, push => pusher or pousser
– mantale
16 hours ago
3
@Mawg All interesting software projects involve a team, as well as interaction with non-technical people. If you can't work well in a team, it doesn't matter how great your technical skills are, you won't be very useful for the project.
– Voo
16 hours ago
9
@Mawg I am a software developer. The usual cliché of the introverted nerd hacking away in the basement and never talking to anyone is a thing of the past. In today's software development world you need to be able to communicate clearly with your team members and stakeholders. Reason number one why IT projects fail is bad communication, not lack of technical expertise.
– Philipp
16 hours ago
2
Social skills are important; I am just sure if they are more important that technical skills. Can we agree that both are required and the exact mix is situational?
– Mawg
15 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
16
down vote
If you are interviewing for a technical position in a country where English is not the first language, then there may be a preference or expectation that technical discussions be conducted in the local language, as opposed to English. If that is the case, then you can make the request; however, you should be aware that it may not work to your advantage.
add a comment |
up vote
12
down vote
Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
As the other answers point out. There is nothing intrinsically rude about asking, but it is a bit demanding however understandable and convenient it may be for you.
My addition would be that the best solution is to sidestep the whole problem and prepare as you would for any interview by studying the French terms. If you get stuck, apologise and use the English term and clarify as you go.
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
While it will not be seen as rude to ask for the interview do be done in english, keep in mind the the interviewer might not be a fluent english speaker (if you are interviewing in a non english speaking country).
Since you probably don't want to make the interviewer unease, using his native language is probably better (specialy if you are fluent), but do not fear to fallback on the english technical word if needed. I don't know in which sector you are searching job, but in software developpement, I will be surprise if the interviewer wouldn't know the english word. And if need be, he can always ask for clarification. Since you have done your studies in england it will balso e understandable that you are more fluent with technical english than technical french.
Even if you where to end up in a pure french environnement, just learning the technical vocabulary shouldn't be such a diffucult task (probably even easier than the firm internal jargon).
As a side note: in 10 years of software developpement in France (in both a small firm and a big international one), I have always code and work in english because:
- you might need to share your code (or documentation) with not french speaker
- online documentation and resources are mostly in english.
So I will probably have an easier time to explain thing in french using english technical words than doing the whole with only french words.
New contributor
Falling back on one language for jargon in a sentence in the other language is a good compromise.
– Ian
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
While I generally agree with the other answers that say you should be prepared to be interviewed in French if that's the language you'll be expected to use on the job, I don't think it would be unreasonable to ask for English.
Everyone knows that being interviewed is a stressful activity, much more so than conducting the interview. While you might be able to converse in French in more casual situations, and even in professional situations, it may be hard for you to put your best foot forward at the same time.
In many organizations, you're likely to be interviewed by several different people. You'll probably have to make this request to each of them at the start of the session, and should expect to get different answers, as some of them will be more fluent in English than others. When scheduling the interview, I think you should ask the recruiter or HR representative whether such a request would be acceptable at all.
As to how to make the request, just ask politely, with a reason they should understand and that doesn't sound selfish or demanding. You're being interviewed by ordinary people who want to hire eager candidates (some will become your colleagues if you get the job), they're not generally out to get you. Something like:
Would it be OK if we spoke in English, I think I'll be able to answer more fully and clearly if we do.
Of course, you should make the request in French. And hopefully they'll be able to tell from how you ask that you're proficient in French.
You could also offer to switch back to French after the technical portion of the interview, so they can see that you're fluent enough to conduct business.
If there are multiple interviews for a position in which one is expected to speak French, at least one of them should be in French. Saying "I don't want your only impression of me to be of me speaking French" is one thing, but "I'm not going to speak French at all" in another.
– Acccumulation
yesterday
@Acccumulation Good point, and that's kind of what I was getting at in my last paragraph.
– Barmar
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
It depends on the field your work will be in.
I am from the Netherlands and work in IT. All courses from my university were in English as well. Here it is completely normal and accepted to speak a mix of both. It is actually preferred to use English for the technical terms and code is written in English by default.
It also depends on the colleagues you will be working with. Here, if there is someone in the room who doesn't speak Dutch the conversation is carried out in English. When I was applying for a job I sent out all my application forms in English since most technical terms don't translate to Dutch and I wouldn't want to work for a company where Dutch is enforced.
All this being said, I can imagine these points don't hold up in other fields or countries where English is not as dominant.
New contributor
add a comment |
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
6 Answers
6
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
54
down vote
Unless you are applying to a company which has a philosophy of using English as the company language, that request will likely get rejected.
The reason is that in today's workplace environment, social skills are even more valued than technical skills. It doesn't just matter how well you do things. It also matters how well you can explain what you are doing.
When you are working in a French company within a French team, for French customers and with French suppliers, then a very important part of your work will be to communicate in French. They need to judge your proficiency in this skill.
6
I wonder if the OP can do the interview in French, but refer to key terms in English by saying "as they say in English", (insert english term here, like DevOps, Factory pattern, Continuous Delivery) - especially if there are no direct french equivalents (Le Devops?). This way, they are playing by the interview rules and at the same time highlighting their english skills
– vikingsteve
17 hours ago
1
@vikingsteve the vast majority of technical terms are not translated, or just slightly, even when direct translation would be possible: DevOps => DevOps, Factory Pattern => paterne factory, refactor => refactorer, push => pusher or pousser
– mantale
16 hours ago
3
@Mawg All interesting software projects involve a team, as well as interaction with non-technical people. If you can't work well in a team, it doesn't matter how great your technical skills are, you won't be very useful for the project.
– Voo
16 hours ago
9
@Mawg I am a software developer. The usual cliché of the introverted nerd hacking away in the basement and never talking to anyone is a thing of the past. In today's software development world you need to be able to communicate clearly with your team members and stakeholders. Reason number one why IT projects fail is bad communication, not lack of technical expertise.
– Philipp
16 hours ago
2
Social skills are important; I am just sure if they are more important that technical skills. Can we agree that both are required and the exact mix is situational?
– Mawg
15 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
54
down vote
Unless you are applying to a company which has a philosophy of using English as the company language, that request will likely get rejected.
The reason is that in today's workplace environment, social skills are even more valued than technical skills. It doesn't just matter how well you do things. It also matters how well you can explain what you are doing.
When you are working in a French company within a French team, for French customers and with French suppliers, then a very important part of your work will be to communicate in French. They need to judge your proficiency in this skill.
6
I wonder if the OP can do the interview in French, but refer to key terms in English by saying "as they say in English", (insert english term here, like DevOps, Factory pattern, Continuous Delivery) - especially if there are no direct french equivalents (Le Devops?). This way, they are playing by the interview rules and at the same time highlighting their english skills
– vikingsteve
17 hours ago
1
@vikingsteve the vast majority of technical terms are not translated, or just slightly, even when direct translation would be possible: DevOps => DevOps, Factory Pattern => paterne factory, refactor => refactorer, push => pusher or pousser
– mantale
16 hours ago
3
@Mawg All interesting software projects involve a team, as well as interaction with non-technical people. If you can't work well in a team, it doesn't matter how great your technical skills are, you won't be very useful for the project.
– Voo
16 hours ago
9
@Mawg I am a software developer. The usual cliché of the introverted nerd hacking away in the basement and never talking to anyone is a thing of the past. In today's software development world you need to be able to communicate clearly with your team members and stakeholders. Reason number one why IT projects fail is bad communication, not lack of technical expertise.
– Philipp
16 hours ago
2
Social skills are important; I am just sure if they are more important that technical skills. Can we agree that both are required and the exact mix is situational?
– Mawg
15 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
54
down vote
up vote
54
down vote
Unless you are applying to a company which has a philosophy of using English as the company language, that request will likely get rejected.
The reason is that in today's workplace environment, social skills are even more valued than technical skills. It doesn't just matter how well you do things. It also matters how well you can explain what you are doing.
When you are working in a French company within a French team, for French customers and with French suppliers, then a very important part of your work will be to communicate in French. They need to judge your proficiency in this skill.
Unless you are applying to a company which has a philosophy of using English as the company language, that request will likely get rejected.
The reason is that in today's workplace environment, social skills are even more valued than technical skills. It doesn't just matter how well you do things. It also matters how well you can explain what you are doing.
When you are working in a French company within a French team, for French customers and with French suppliers, then a very important part of your work will be to communicate in French. They need to judge your proficiency in this skill.
edited yesterday
answered yesterday
Philipp
22k45188
22k45188
6
I wonder if the OP can do the interview in French, but refer to key terms in English by saying "as they say in English", (insert english term here, like DevOps, Factory pattern, Continuous Delivery) - especially if there are no direct french equivalents (Le Devops?). This way, they are playing by the interview rules and at the same time highlighting their english skills
– vikingsteve
17 hours ago
1
@vikingsteve the vast majority of technical terms are not translated, or just slightly, even when direct translation would be possible: DevOps => DevOps, Factory Pattern => paterne factory, refactor => refactorer, push => pusher or pousser
– mantale
16 hours ago
3
@Mawg All interesting software projects involve a team, as well as interaction with non-technical people. If you can't work well in a team, it doesn't matter how great your technical skills are, you won't be very useful for the project.
– Voo
16 hours ago
9
@Mawg I am a software developer. The usual cliché of the introverted nerd hacking away in the basement and never talking to anyone is a thing of the past. In today's software development world you need to be able to communicate clearly with your team members and stakeholders. Reason number one why IT projects fail is bad communication, not lack of technical expertise.
– Philipp
16 hours ago
2
Social skills are important; I am just sure if they are more important that technical skills. Can we agree that both are required and the exact mix is situational?
– Mawg
15 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
6
I wonder if the OP can do the interview in French, but refer to key terms in English by saying "as they say in English", (insert english term here, like DevOps, Factory pattern, Continuous Delivery) - especially if there are no direct french equivalents (Le Devops?). This way, they are playing by the interview rules and at the same time highlighting their english skills
– vikingsteve
17 hours ago
1
@vikingsteve the vast majority of technical terms are not translated, or just slightly, even when direct translation would be possible: DevOps => DevOps, Factory Pattern => paterne factory, refactor => refactorer, push => pusher or pousser
– mantale
16 hours ago
3
@Mawg All interesting software projects involve a team, as well as interaction with non-technical people. If you can't work well in a team, it doesn't matter how great your technical skills are, you won't be very useful for the project.
– Voo
16 hours ago
9
@Mawg I am a software developer. The usual cliché of the introverted nerd hacking away in the basement and never talking to anyone is a thing of the past. In today's software development world you need to be able to communicate clearly with your team members and stakeholders. Reason number one why IT projects fail is bad communication, not lack of technical expertise.
– Philipp
16 hours ago
2
Social skills are important; I am just sure if they are more important that technical skills. Can we agree that both are required and the exact mix is situational?
– Mawg
15 hours ago
6
6
I wonder if the OP can do the interview in French, but refer to key terms in English by saying "as they say in English", (insert english term here, like DevOps, Factory pattern, Continuous Delivery) - especially if there are no direct french equivalents (Le Devops?). This way, they are playing by the interview rules and at the same time highlighting their english skills
– vikingsteve
17 hours ago
I wonder if the OP can do the interview in French, but refer to key terms in English by saying "as they say in English", (insert english term here, like DevOps, Factory pattern, Continuous Delivery) - especially if there are no direct french equivalents (Le Devops?). This way, they are playing by the interview rules and at the same time highlighting their english skills
– vikingsteve
17 hours ago
1
1
@vikingsteve the vast majority of technical terms are not translated, or just slightly, even when direct translation would be possible: DevOps => DevOps, Factory Pattern => paterne factory, refactor => refactorer, push => pusher or pousser
– mantale
16 hours ago
@vikingsteve the vast majority of technical terms are not translated, or just slightly, even when direct translation would be possible: DevOps => DevOps, Factory Pattern => paterne factory, refactor => refactorer, push => pusher or pousser
– mantale
16 hours ago
3
3
@Mawg All interesting software projects involve a team, as well as interaction with non-technical people. If you can't work well in a team, it doesn't matter how great your technical skills are, you won't be very useful for the project.
– Voo
16 hours ago
@Mawg All interesting software projects involve a team, as well as interaction with non-technical people. If you can't work well in a team, it doesn't matter how great your technical skills are, you won't be very useful for the project.
– Voo
16 hours ago
9
9
@Mawg I am a software developer. The usual cliché of the introverted nerd hacking away in the basement and never talking to anyone is a thing of the past. In today's software development world you need to be able to communicate clearly with your team members and stakeholders. Reason number one why IT projects fail is bad communication, not lack of technical expertise.
– Philipp
16 hours ago
@Mawg I am a software developer. The usual cliché of the introverted nerd hacking away in the basement and never talking to anyone is a thing of the past. In today's software development world you need to be able to communicate clearly with your team members and stakeholders. Reason number one why IT projects fail is bad communication, not lack of technical expertise.
– Philipp
16 hours ago
2
2
Social skills are important; I am just sure if they are more important that technical skills. Can we agree that both are required and the exact mix is situational?
– Mawg
15 hours ago
Social skills are important; I am just sure if they are more important that technical skills. Can we agree that both are required and the exact mix is situational?
– Mawg
15 hours ago
|
show 5 more comments
up vote
16
down vote
If you are interviewing for a technical position in a country where English is not the first language, then there may be a preference or expectation that technical discussions be conducted in the local language, as opposed to English. If that is the case, then you can make the request; however, you should be aware that it may not work to your advantage.
add a comment |
up vote
16
down vote
If you are interviewing for a technical position in a country where English is not the first language, then there may be a preference or expectation that technical discussions be conducted in the local language, as opposed to English. If that is the case, then you can make the request; however, you should be aware that it may not work to your advantage.
add a comment |
up vote
16
down vote
up vote
16
down vote
If you are interviewing for a technical position in a country where English is not the first language, then there may be a preference or expectation that technical discussions be conducted in the local language, as opposed to English. If that is the case, then you can make the request; however, you should be aware that it may not work to your advantage.
If you are interviewing for a technical position in a country where English is not the first language, then there may be a preference or expectation that technical discussions be conducted in the local language, as opposed to English. If that is the case, then you can make the request; however, you should be aware that it may not work to your advantage.
answered yesterday
Time4Tea
2,5363824
2,5363824
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
12
down vote
Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
As the other answers point out. There is nothing intrinsically rude about asking, but it is a bit demanding however understandable and convenient it may be for you.
My addition would be that the best solution is to sidestep the whole problem and prepare as you would for any interview by studying the French terms. If you get stuck, apologise and use the English term and clarify as you go.
add a comment |
up vote
12
down vote
Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
As the other answers point out. There is nothing intrinsically rude about asking, but it is a bit demanding however understandable and convenient it may be for you.
My addition would be that the best solution is to sidestep the whole problem and prepare as you would for any interview by studying the French terms. If you get stuck, apologise and use the English term and clarify as you go.
add a comment |
up vote
12
down vote
up vote
12
down vote
Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
As the other answers point out. There is nothing intrinsically rude about asking, but it is a bit demanding however understandable and convenient it may be for you.
My addition would be that the best solution is to sidestep the whole problem and prepare as you would for any interview by studying the French terms. If you get stuck, apologise and use the English term and clarify as you go.
Is there any way to request this without sounding rude or too demanding?
As the other answers point out. There is nothing intrinsically rude about asking, but it is a bit demanding however understandable and convenient it may be for you.
My addition would be that the best solution is to sidestep the whole problem and prepare as you would for any interview by studying the French terms. If you get stuck, apologise and use the English term and clarify as you go.
answered yesterday
Kilisi
105k58236414
105k58236414
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
While it will not be seen as rude to ask for the interview do be done in english, keep in mind the the interviewer might not be a fluent english speaker (if you are interviewing in a non english speaking country).
Since you probably don't want to make the interviewer unease, using his native language is probably better (specialy if you are fluent), but do not fear to fallback on the english technical word if needed. I don't know in which sector you are searching job, but in software developpement, I will be surprise if the interviewer wouldn't know the english word. And if need be, he can always ask for clarification. Since you have done your studies in england it will balso e understandable that you are more fluent with technical english than technical french.
Even if you where to end up in a pure french environnement, just learning the technical vocabulary shouldn't be such a diffucult task (probably even easier than the firm internal jargon).
As a side note: in 10 years of software developpement in France (in both a small firm and a big international one), I have always code and work in english because:
- you might need to share your code (or documentation) with not french speaker
- online documentation and resources are mostly in english.
So I will probably have an easier time to explain thing in french using english technical words than doing the whole with only french words.
New contributor
Falling back on one language for jargon in a sentence in the other language is a good compromise.
– Ian
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
While it will not be seen as rude to ask for the interview do be done in english, keep in mind the the interviewer might not be a fluent english speaker (if you are interviewing in a non english speaking country).
Since you probably don't want to make the interviewer unease, using his native language is probably better (specialy if you are fluent), but do not fear to fallback on the english technical word if needed. I don't know in which sector you are searching job, but in software developpement, I will be surprise if the interviewer wouldn't know the english word. And if need be, he can always ask for clarification. Since you have done your studies in england it will balso e understandable that you are more fluent with technical english than technical french.
Even if you where to end up in a pure french environnement, just learning the technical vocabulary shouldn't be such a diffucult task (probably even easier than the firm internal jargon).
As a side note: in 10 years of software developpement in France (in both a small firm and a big international one), I have always code and work in english because:
- you might need to share your code (or documentation) with not french speaker
- online documentation and resources are mostly in english.
So I will probably have an easier time to explain thing in french using english technical words than doing the whole with only french words.
New contributor
Falling back on one language for jargon in a sentence in the other language is a good compromise.
– Ian
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
5
down vote
up vote
5
down vote
While it will not be seen as rude to ask for the interview do be done in english, keep in mind the the interviewer might not be a fluent english speaker (if you are interviewing in a non english speaking country).
Since you probably don't want to make the interviewer unease, using his native language is probably better (specialy if you are fluent), but do not fear to fallback on the english technical word if needed. I don't know in which sector you are searching job, but in software developpement, I will be surprise if the interviewer wouldn't know the english word. And if need be, he can always ask for clarification. Since you have done your studies in england it will balso e understandable that you are more fluent with technical english than technical french.
Even if you where to end up in a pure french environnement, just learning the technical vocabulary shouldn't be such a diffucult task (probably even easier than the firm internal jargon).
As a side note: in 10 years of software developpement in France (in both a small firm and a big international one), I have always code and work in english because:
- you might need to share your code (or documentation) with not french speaker
- online documentation and resources are mostly in english.
So I will probably have an easier time to explain thing in french using english technical words than doing the whole with only french words.
New contributor
While it will not be seen as rude to ask for the interview do be done in english, keep in mind the the interviewer might not be a fluent english speaker (if you are interviewing in a non english speaking country).
Since you probably don't want to make the interviewer unease, using his native language is probably better (specialy if you are fluent), but do not fear to fallback on the english technical word if needed. I don't know in which sector you are searching job, but in software developpement, I will be surprise if the interviewer wouldn't know the english word. And if need be, he can always ask for clarification. Since you have done your studies in england it will balso e understandable that you are more fluent with technical english than technical french.
Even if you where to end up in a pure french environnement, just learning the technical vocabulary shouldn't be such a diffucult task (probably even easier than the firm internal jargon).
As a side note: in 10 years of software developpement in France (in both a small firm and a big international one), I have always code and work in english because:
- you might need to share your code (or documentation) with not french speaker
- online documentation and resources are mostly in english.
So I will probably have an easier time to explain thing in french using english technical words than doing the whole with only french words.
New contributor
New contributor
answered yesterday
Bear'sBeard
511
511
New contributor
New contributor
Falling back on one language for jargon in a sentence in the other language is a good compromise.
– Ian
yesterday
add a comment |
Falling back on one language for jargon in a sentence in the other language is a good compromise.
– Ian
yesterday
Falling back on one language for jargon in a sentence in the other language is a good compromise.
– Ian
yesterday
Falling back on one language for jargon in a sentence in the other language is a good compromise.
– Ian
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
While I generally agree with the other answers that say you should be prepared to be interviewed in French if that's the language you'll be expected to use on the job, I don't think it would be unreasonable to ask for English.
Everyone knows that being interviewed is a stressful activity, much more so than conducting the interview. While you might be able to converse in French in more casual situations, and even in professional situations, it may be hard for you to put your best foot forward at the same time.
In many organizations, you're likely to be interviewed by several different people. You'll probably have to make this request to each of them at the start of the session, and should expect to get different answers, as some of them will be more fluent in English than others. When scheduling the interview, I think you should ask the recruiter or HR representative whether such a request would be acceptable at all.
As to how to make the request, just ask politely, with a reason they should understand and that doesn't sound selfish or demanding. You're being interviewed by ordinary people who want to hire eager candidates (some will become your colleagues if you get the job), they're not generally out to get you. Something like:
Would it be OK if we spoke in English, I think I'll be able to answer more fully and clearly if we do.
Of course, you should make the request in French. And hopefully they'll be able to tell from how you ask that you're proficient in French.
You could also offer to switch back to French after the technical portion of the interview, so they can see that you're fluent enough to conduct business.
If there are multiple interviews for a position in which one is expected to speak French, at least one of them should be in French. Saying "I don't want your only impression of me to be of me speaking French" is one thing, but "I'm not going to speak French at all" in another.
– Acccumulation
yesterday
@Acccumulation Good point, and that's kind of what I was getting at in my last paragraph.
– Barmar
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
While I generally agree with the other answers that say you should be prepared to be interviewed in French if that's the language you'll be expected to use on the job, I don't think it would be unreasonable to ask for English.
Everyone knows that being interviewed is a stressful activity, much more so than conducting the interview. While you might be able to converse in French in more casual situations, and even in professional situations, it may be hard for you to put your best foot forward at the same time.
In many organizations, you're likely to be interviewed by several different people. You'll probably have to make this request to each of them at the start of the session, and should expect to get different answers, as some of them will be more fluent in English than others. When scheduling the interview, I think you should ask the recruiter or HR representative whether such a request would be acceptable at all.
As to how to make the request, just ask politely, with a reason they should understand and that doesn't sound selfish or demanding. You're being interviewed by ordinary people who want to hire eager candidates (some will become your colleagues if you get the job), they're not generally out to get you. Something like:
Would it be OK if we spoke in English, I think I'll be able to answer more fully and clearly if we do.
Of course, you should make the request in French. And hopefully they'll be able to tell from how you ask that you're proficient in French.
You could also offer to switch back to French after the technical portion of the interview, so they can see that you're fluent enough to conduct business.
If there are multiple interviews for a position in which one is expected to speak French, at least one of them should be in French. Saying "I don't want your only impression of me to be of me speaking French" is one thing, but "I'm not going to speak French at all" in another.
– Acccumulation
yesterday
@Acccumulation Good point, and that's kind of what I was getting at in my last paragraph.
– Barmar
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
While I generally agree with the other answers that say you should be prepared to be interviewed in French if that's the language you'll be expected to use on the job, I don't think it would be unreasonable to ask for English.
Everyone knows that being interviewed is a stressful activity, much more so than conducting the interview. While you might be able to converse in French in more casual situations, and even in professional situations, it may be hard for you to put your best foot forward at the same time.
In many organizations, you're likely to be interviewed by several different people. You'll probably have to make this request to each of them at the start of the session, and should expect to get different answers, as some of them will be more fluent in English than others. When scheduling the interview, I think you should ask the recruiter or HR representative whether such a request would be acceptable at all.
As to how to make the request, just ask politely, with a reason they should understand and that doesn't sound selfish or demanding. You're being interviewed by ordinary people who want to hire eager candidates (some will become your colleagues if you get the job), they're not generally out to get you. Something like:
Would it be OK if we spoke in English, I think I'll be able to answer more fully and clearly if we do.
Of course, you should make the request in French. And hopefully they'll be able to tell from how you ask that you're proficient in French.
You could also offer to switch back to French after the technical portion of the interview, so they can see that you're fluent enough to conduct business.
While I generally agree with the other answers that say you should be prepared to be interviewed in French if that's the language you'll be expected to use on the job, I don't think it would be unreasonable to ask for English.
Everyone knows that being interviewed is a stressful activity, much more so than conducting the interview. While you might be able to converse in French in more casual situations, and even in professional situations, it may be hard for you to put your best foot forward at the same time.
In many organizations, you're likely to be interviewed by several different people. You'll probably have to make this request to each of them at the start of the session, and should expect to get different answers, as some of them will be more fluent in English than others. When scheduling the interview, I think you should ask the recruiter or HR representative whether such a request would be acceptable at all.
As to how to make the request, just ask politely, with a reason they should understand and that doesn't sound selfish or demanding. You're being interviewed by ordinary people who want to hire eager candidates (some will become your colleagues if you get the job), they're not generally out to get you. Something like:
Would it be OK if we spoke in English, I think I'll be able to answer more fully and clearly if we do.
Of course, you should make the request in French. And hopefully they'll be able to tell from how you ask that you're proficient in French.
You could also offer to switch back to French after the technical portion of the interview, so they can see that you're fluent enough to conduct business.
answered yesterday
Barmar
59138
59138
If there are multiple interviews for a position in which one is expected to speak French, at least one of them should be in French. Saying "I don't want your only impression of me to be of me speaking French" is one thing, but "I'm not going to speak French at all" in another.
– Acccumulation
yesterday
@Acccumulation Good point, and that's kind of what I was getting at in my last paragraph.
– Barmar
yesterday
add a comment |
If there are multiple interviews for a position in which one is expected to speak French, at least one of them should be in French. Saying "I don't want your only impression of me to be of me speaking French" is one thing, but "I'm not going to speak French at all" in another.
– Acccumulation
yesterday
@Acccumulation Good point, and that's kind of what I was getting at in my last paragraph.
– Barmar
yesterday
If there are multiple interviews for a position in which one is expected to speak French, at least one of them should be in French. Saying "I don't want your only impression of me to be of me speaking French" is one thing, but "I'm not going to speak French at all" in another.
– Acccumulation
yesterday
If there are multiple interviews for a position in which one is expected to speak French, at least one of them should be in French. Saying "I don't want your only impression of me to be of me speaking French" is one thing, but "I'm not going to speak French at all" in another.
– Acccumulation
yesterday
@Acccumulation Good point, and that's kind of what I was getting at in my last paragraph.
– Barmar
yesterday
@Acccumulation Good point, and that's kind of what I was getting at in my last paragraph.
– Barmar
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
It depends on the field your work will be in.
I am from the Netherlands and work in IT. All courses from my university were in English as well. Here it is completely normal and accepted to speak a mix of both. It is actually preferred to use English for the technical terms and code is written in English by default.
It also depends on the colleagues you will be working with. Here, if there is someone in the room who doesn't speak Dutch the conversation is carried out in English. When I was applying for a job I sent out all my application forms in English since most technical terms don't translate to Dutch and I wouldn't want to work for a company where Dutch is enforced.
All this being said, I can imagine these points don't hold up in other fields or countries where English is not as dominant.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
It depends on the field your work will be in.
I am from the Netherlands and work in IT. All courses from my university were in English as well. Here it is completely normal and accepted to speak a mix of both. It is actually preferred to use English for the technical terms and code is written in English by default.
It also depends on the colleagues you will be working with. Here, if there is someone in the room who doesn't speak Dutch the conversation is carried out in English. When I was applying for a job I sent out all my application forms in English since most technical terms don't translate to Dutch and I wouldn't want to work for a company where Dutch is enforced.
All this being said, I can imagine these points don't hold up in other fields or countries where English is not as dominant.
New contributor
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
It depends on the field your work will be in.
I am from the Netherlands and work in IT. All courses from my university were in English as well. Here it is completely normal and accepted to speak a mix of both. It is actually preferred to use English for the technical terms and code is written in English by default.
It also depends on the colleagues you will be working with. Here, if there is someone in the room who doesn't speak Dutch the conversation is carried out in English. When I was applying for a job I sent out all my application forms in English since most technical terms don't translate to Dutch and I wouldn't want to work for a company where Dutch is enforced.
All this being said, I can imagine these points don't hold up in other fields or countries where English is not as dominant.
New contributor
It depends on the field your work will be in.
I am from the Netherlands and work in IT. All courses from my university were in English as well. Here it is completely normal and accepted to speak a mix of both. It is actually preferred to use English for the technical terms and code is written in English by default.
It also depends on the colleagues you will be working with. Here, if there is someone in the room who doesn't speak Dutch the conversation is carried out in English. When I was applying for a job I sent out all my application forms in English since most technical terms don't translate to Dutch and I wouldn't want to work for a company where Dutch is enforced.
All this being said, I can imagine these points don't hold up in other fields or countries where English is not as dominant.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 13 hours ago
Jelle de Fries
101
101
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
35
Where is the interview being conducted? I also find it much easier to communicate technical terms in English rather than my native language.
– rath
yesterday
32
What language is required for the job?
– Dukeling
yesterday
Is it possible that they want you to be able to answer technical questions in French for the job - e.g. if you are working with French speaking colleagues or customers/suppliers?
– colmde
16 hours ago
3
It seems to me it's rather relevant where this is taking place. I suspect there's a big difference between what place English has in the culture of France and that of Canada, for example.
– Jasper
15 hours ago
It it's a Frenchman, then they will probably insist on using French. That's my experience. For some reason, they are so proud/nationalist/... that they will, even if it does harm to them on other front (not getting the candidate, not selling you a service, etc.)
– Ondra Žižka
13 hours ago