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Overview:
Many international students dream of a better future by obtaining a
degree in higher education in the United States. Of the many who apply,
few succeed due to the complicated application procedures required to
obtain a nonimmigrant visa for foreign students. It is known as a nonimmigrant
visa, because a nonimmigrant is anyone who is permitted to enter the
United States temporarily for a specific purpose. However, a foreign
student who is traveling to the US primarily as a tourist and wants to
take a course of study of fewer than eighteen hours per week will not
require such a visa. In contrast, a foreign student who plans to
take a course of study of more than eighteen hours per week must obtain
a student visa.
Types of visas:
- F1: An F1 visa is for students who wish to attend a university,
high school, seminary, or college. The F1 visa is the most popular
among students.
- M1: An M1 visa is for vocational studies only.
Ways to apply depending upon the student’s location:
- Application from outside of the United States.
- Application while physically present in the United States.
Steps for students outside of the United States:
- List those schools in which you are interested;
- Determine which of the schools are approved by the United States Citizenship
and Immigration Service (USCIS) by contacting the schools and asking
whether each approved school accepts international students;
- Submit your application for acceptance to each approved school and,
if you are qualified for admission, ask that each such school send you
a Certificate of Eligibility (Form I-20 A-B for an F1 visa and Form I-20
M-N for an M1 visa);
- Take each such Certificate to the nearest US embassy for an interview
to obtain your F1 or M1 visa, whichever is applicable. Note:
You may apply for the visa as late as 120 days before your start date
of your academic program in the US. If you apply earlier than 120
days, the embassy will hold on to your application until it is able to
issue the visa;
- At the embassy, you will have to demonstrate that you have enough financial
resources to pay your tuition and your living expenses in the US. You
must also demonstrate that you intend to return to your home country
after your studies in the US are over; and
- When arriving at the US port of entry, the immigration official will
stamp your duration of stay in the US and attach a form I-94 (arrival/departure
card), which you must keep secure, since it is the only proof of your
lawful entry into the US. Note: All first time students
can enter the US only thirty days prior to the start date of your academic
program. If you want to enter the US more than thirty days prior to the
start of your academic program, you must obtain a visitor’s visa.
Steps for students inside the United States:
- If you are already in the United States on any other visa and
want to get a student’s visa, list those schools in which
you are interested;
- Determine which of the schools are approved by the USCIS by contacting
the schools and asking whether each approved school accepts international
students;
- Submit your application for acceptance to each approved school and,
if you are qualified for admission, ask that each such school send you
a Certificate of Eligibility;
- At the embassy, you will have to demonstrate that you have enough financial
resources to pay your tuition and your living expenses in the US. You
must also demonstrate that you intend to return to your home country
after your studies in the US are over; and
- Visit the US Embassy and get your F1 or M1 visa stamped.
Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS):
Each student’s visa category is strictly monitored by the federal
government through an Internet based information system known as SEVIS.
Every student has a unique ID number issued by SEVIS, which is printed
on each student’s I-20 form. The educational institute is responsible
for reporting all the information regarding a student to the government.
Family Members:
Each student granted a student visa may bring his or her spouse and
children into the US, for as long as the student will be in the US, through
a derivative class of visa known as an F2 visa, which is a dependent
visa. Dependents coming on this visa are not allowed to work in
the US. Each dependent must show the embassy proof of the dependent’s
relationship with the student, such as a marriage certificate or a birth
certificate.
Employment:
- Generally, a student cannot work for more than twenty hours per
week during the student’s course of study in the US. However,
during annual vacations, a student can work up to forty hours per
week.
- If a student maintains a full-time student status, he/she is allowed
to work on-
- campus at the school into which the student has been admitted.
- If a student is in financial need he/she can work off-campus by demonstrating
and applying to the USCIS for employment authorization.
- During or upon completion of a student’s course of study, a student
can apply to the USCIS for optional practical training for a period not
to exceed twelve months. During this twelve month period, however,
if an employer is willing to hire and sponsor a student as an immigrant
worker, the employer can petition for H1B status for the student. For
more details on H1B status, please refer to our H1B information section.
Note: An M1 student cannot change status to F1 or H even if the M training
helped the student qualify for the H classification.
Duration of stay:
A student may stay in the US during the course of his/her studies,
provided that the student maintains a full-time student status. If a
student’s visa expires while he/she is in the US, but the student’s
Form I-20 and Form I-94 are still valid, then he/she may legally continue
to stay in the US. However, if a student’s visa expires while the
student is outside of the US, then the student must obtain a new visa
for re-entry to the US. Exception: A student who is visiting outside of the US
to a country that neighbors the US, such as Mexico, Canada, or any of the
adjacent islands, for a period of less than thirty days, then the student
will be permitted to re-enter the US.
The USCIS provides a grace period of sixty days to F1 students and thirty
days for M1 students to return to the student’s home country after
completion of studies in the US. However, after completion of the course
of study in the US, students can either continue to study at the same institute
or at another institute by enrolling in a different full-time program.
If a student overstays more than sixty days, the student will be in violation
of the immigration laws of US, will be deported to the student’s
home country, and will be denied future entry into the US.
Transfer to another school:
A student may transfer to another school as long as the student maintains
full-time student status in the school in which the student is enrolled.
If a student is eligible for admission to the new school, the student
should obtain a form I-20 from the new school and report the transfer
to the school in which the student is enrolled.
Why seek legal advise?
Don’t let your dreams shatter, because of difficulty understanding
the intricacies of the immigration laws of the US. Hire a professional
immigration attorney to work for you and to turn your dreams into a reality.
If you have any further inquiries, contact us. We will be more than
happy to answer them.
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by Jeffrey B. Peltz P.C.. All rights reserved. You may reproduce
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