
Sydney Job Alert: JavaScript/Angular Developer
- Long term contract
- Government Agency
- Located in Adelaide
Role Requirements:
- Australian Citizenship
- Role located in Adelaide
- Exceptional front-end development skills in JavaScript/TypeScript and using Angular
- Experience designing and consuming RESTful web services
- Experience in Angular deployment processes
- Hands on experience writing/running unit tests with Jasmine and Karma along with end to end tests with Protractor
- Experience using CSS and SASS
- Strong understanding of coding best practices – OOP, Design patterns, Data structures, Component driven development
- Solid understanding of single page application (SPA) design patterns
- Understanding and experience with Agile/Scrum methodologies
- Good understanding of designing and developing in accordance with WCAG specifications
- Experience using the Atlassian tool JIRA
To be considered for this role, respond to this advertisement or contact Jeremy at AUREC on 02 6162 9615.
Aurec Group focuses on providing a highly specialised human capital sourcing service across Australia and Asia Pacific.
Visit our website www.aurec.com
Working holidays in Australia is a program that enables eligible young people aged between 18 and 30 years (or 35 for some countries)[1] to visit Australia and to supplement their travel funds through incidental employment. Forms of working holiday visas (today, Work and Holiday (subclass 462) and Working Holiday (subclass 417)) have existed since January 1975, designed to “promote international understanding by enabling young people to experience the culture of another country.”
In the first year of the working holiday maker program, less than 2,000 working holiday visas were issued, but that figure has grown significantly. The International Visitor Survey by the Department of Immigration and Border Protection and Tourism Research Australia reports that 121,000 working holiday makers arrive in Australia every year as of December 2016, including 57,000 from the UK, 35,200 from Korea, and 33,600 from Germany.[2] These arrivals have a positive effect on the Australian economy estimated to spend more than $3 billion annually.[2]
There are almost no limits to what employment a working holiday maker can undertake. While traditionally most of the jobs have been in hospitality or harvest work; many work in finance, education, health care and other industries. Working holiday visa holders are generally not covered by the Australian Medicare health insurance scheme, but they may have limited access because of a reciprocal agreement between Medicare and their home country.
