|
Frequently
Asked Questions
Questions
about Internship Employment
Q:
Can I be accepted if I have 3 years bachelor's degree?
A:
Lincoln University needs student to have 4 years
bachelor's degree, but other schools accept 3-years
bachelor's degree.
Q:
Will the university find an internship job for me?
A:
Because the internship is mandatory, applicants must be
placed in an entry level position. It is then the
applicant's responsibility to obtain a higher, paying
employment position. However, staffs hired by H1bridge.com
will
help the student in this endeavor by assisting with the
preparation of a resume, introductions to companies
looking for employees and showing students how to search
for employment through the newspapers, the internet, job
fairs or other placement services.
Q:
What is the likelihood that I will find my internship
employment?
A:
Internship positions are available for all students.
However, the type of internship position will depend on
your skills, your experience, and your English ability.
The co-op program is a mandatory program so every
co-op student will be employed.
Q:
How long will it take for me to obtain my internship
employment?
A:
Most students will obtain employment in the first month
at the campus. For those with limited skills, it
may take a little longer to find a suitable internship
position.
Q.
Will my internship job be arranged before I come to the
U.S.?
A.
No. It is very difficult to have a job arranged
for students prior to their arrival due to the fact that
employers almost always want to interview the
candidates personally. However, the university has
contacts with companies that will hire students for a
temporary entry level job, so they can be employed as
soon as possible. While working in the entry
level position, the student can simultaneously be
searching for a more suitable job, and still fulfill the
requirement of being in an internship.
A:
Q: How much can I earn in an internship job?
A:
Some entry level jobs will pay approximately $7.00 per
hour, but more highly skilled positions may pay up to
$10 or more per hour. Students are allowed
to work up to 40 hours per week, with overtime also
possible, depending on the job.
Q:
Can I find an internship job only in the field
related to my major or is any field O.K?
A:
The employment needs to be related to an integral part
of the curriculum. Consequently, a job which is
related to concepts and principles that you may be
learning in any of your classes will be acceptable.
Q:
How many working hours will I probably work each week?
A:
Your employment can be as a regular full time employee
with the same benefits as are granted to all other
employees. Most employees work 40 hours per week
and receive a one week vacation per year. However,
part-time employment is also available, as you may
choose.
Q:
Do I have to work overtime? Can I keep the
overtime bonus?
A:
Some companies want the interns to work overtime, while
others do not have overtime available. However,
you may keep for your own use all overtime income that
you may earn.
Q.
What if I can't find employment?
A.
Because there are many minimum wage jobs
available, it is highly unlikely that an intern would
not be able to find some type of employment.
Q:
Do I have to have a social security card and a work
permit?
A: The procedure for obtaining a Social Security card
and permission to work begins with obtaining a job offer
letter from a prospective employer. Once an
employer agrees to hire a student, such a letter will be
issued by that employer. The letter is to be
taken to the university for a signature on the
student’s original I-20 form where Curricular
Practical Training is authorized. This
signature by the university official on the I-20 serves
as the co-op student’s “work permit”.
The next step is to take the job offer letter and the
signed I-20 to the Social Security office where
application is made for a Social Security Number.
Q:
Will I have to pay taxes?
A:
Your employer may be required to hold back from your
monthly earnings a little bit of money to cover any
taxes that you might owe. However, after
April 15th of each year most international students find
that they get a refund for some of this withheld amount.
Q:
Is there a way for me to work before actually starting
to attend classes in order for me to save more
money and add it to my current savings?
A:
Students must first be registered and attending
their first semester classes before they can legally
start working. They also need to have received
their social security card. this process can take
up to two weeks. However, students can start
looking for employment as soon as they are registered
for classes.
Q:
Could the work authorization be possibly converted into
a full time work permit upon completion of the Masters
program?
A:
Converting the internship job into a full time
job, such as under an H1-b, is possible.
But, it all depends upon whether the company you find to
work for during the internship is willing to sponsor you
for an H1-b.
Questions
about
Co-op
Programs
Q:
What is Curricular Practical Training?
A:
Curricular Practical Training (CPT) is the legal
description for the paid internship employment that students
engage in while in a co-op program. The purpose of
CPT is to give students practical experience in the
workplace to augment what they are learning in the
classroom.
Q:
What is Optional Practical Training?
A:
Optional Practical Training (OPT) is the legal
description for the one year employment that you
are allowed to engage in after you graduate
from your Master's program. The purpose of OPT is
to give you further practical experience in the
workplace relating to your Master's major.
Q: Am
I allowed to engage in both CPT and OPT?
A:
Yes. However, if you work for more than one year
of CPT, then you may not be allowed to do the one
year of OPT.
Q: If
I choose to work in CPT for the entire length of
time I am in the Master's program, will I be allowed to
do so?
A:
Yes, you are allowed to engage in CPT for as long as you
are a student in the Master's program, even if that is
for 2 1/2 years or more. However, as
indicated above, if, in fact, you do work for more than
a year you may not be allowed to do the additional one
year of OPT after you graduate
Q:
How can I go to school and work at the same time?
A:
All Co-op courses will be offered in the executive format. That is, classes will be offered in the
evenings and on weekends.
Q:
Can I take on-line courses?
A:
Yes. Each course offered in the Master
degree programs is available on-line. Students
will be able to take one on-line course per semester
along with their on-site classes.
Q:
Can I transfer my credits from another school?
A.
The university may give credit for courses already taken
at the Master's level at another school, if the other
school is accredited and if the course content being
transferred is basically the same as one of the courses
in the university's requirement for that major.
The Registrar will make this decision when you arrive
for your first class.
Q:
What if I decide to transfer to a different
university?
A:
If you enroll at the university and complete your course
work for one semester and choose to transfer to another
university you are free to do so, so long as your bills
at the university are all paid in full up to that date
Q:
Is there any financial aid available?
A:
The financial aid that we can offer at the master's
degree co-op program is
the legal right to obtain full time employment from an
American company for the entire time you are in the
graduate school. Thus, students have the
potential of earning in internship employment much more
often than what they might obtain in a scholarship from
a different university
For
bachelor's degree work-study program, student will
receive over $7000 scholarship in their first year.
Questions
about Visas
Q.
Do I have to apply for a visa in my own country?
A:
The American consulates in each country of the
world make the decision about whether or not a visa
applicant must be in his/her own country in order to
apply for a visa. However, the general custom is
that an international student will be allowed to apply
for a visa in countries other than his/her own.
Q:
What is SEVIS?
A.
SEVIS is the Homeland Security Database. Homeland
Security is now requiring F-1 students to pay a
$100 SEVIS fee before the student can apply for the
visa. Students will need a receipt showing payment
of the fee before they can go to the visa interview.
Q.
How do I pay the Sevis fee?
A.
Students can go to
www.fmjfee.com
and apply on line using a credit card which is
the fastest way to make this payment. Students will receive
an e-mail receipt which they will take to the
consulate office at the time of their visa interviews. They
also may pay at a local Western Union Office.
Q.
Can my spouse or children accompany me to the US?
A:
A spouse will be allowed to apply for a visa
to accompany the student. The spouse (with
children) may apply at the same time the student
applies, or may wait for several months to apply until
after the student arrives in the U.S. and gets settled.
The spouse will need to show additional financial
support or a bank statement with sufficient additional
money to support him/herself (and children) when
accompanying the student spouse to the U.S.
Q:
Will I be able to obtain a student (F) visa to go to the
U.S. to study if I have already applied for a B
(visitor) visa or for an Immigrant (lottery) visa and
have been denied?
A: A student visa (F) is a temporary visa in which
the applicant must prove his/her intent to return to the
home country after graduation. Anything in the
student's background that suggests that the student's
real intent is not to return to his/her home country may
cause the application to be rejected. So,
especially in the case of an applicant who has
previously applied for the "lottery" immigrant
visa, the visa officer may view that application as an
absolute indication of the intent to immigrate (rather
than to study). Consequently, getting an F
visa may be much more difficult for such a person.
Q.
Do I need permission from Immigration Services in order
to work off campus?
A.
Students will have an F-1 student visa and, by the
nature of the university's "co-op" program
(which requires internship employment) no further
permission is required by the Immigration Service.
Once the student finds employment that is certified to
be "curriculum related", the university will
issue the appropriate authorization signature allowing
the student to begin working.
Q:
Can I take a
break during summer quarter to return to my country then
return back to school for fall quarter?
A:
Students must attend school full time for 2 consecutive
semesters (9 months) before they are eligible to take a
vacation from their studies.
Q:
What is
required in order to bring my spouse and family?
A:
In order for your spouse and/or children to
accompany you, the university must issue a separate I-20
form. Your family can apply for an F2
(dependant) visa. The university will need the following
information for each family member (including spouse):
full name, date of birth, country of birth, and country
of citizenship.
Q:
If my visa is valid for only 2 years, will I need
to get it extended before it expires?
A:
Having a 2 year visa does not mean that you have
to go back to your home country at the end of two years.
Rather, you can stay for as long as you like beyond the
two years to finish your education in the U.S.
The length of the visa just limits how long you have to
cross the border into the U.S. That is, if, during
those two years you want to go home to visit a number of
times you can use that visa (permission to cross the
border into the U.S.) as often as the visa permits.
But, after the two years are over, you need to renew
your visa so that, if you leave the U.S. and come back,
you will have a valid visa to do so. All
visas can generally be renewed for students who are
legally in the U.S. and want a longer time to leave the
country for a visit to their home countries.
Q:
I am already in the US on a B-1 visa. Can I
change to F-1?
A:
If you are going to change to F-1, which you need to do
in order to get into the paid internship program at the
university, it is much better to do that while in your
home country. If you come to the U.S.
and then apply for a change of status to F-1 it can take
up to several months of waiting while the immigration
service processes your application.
But if you take your I-20 form from the university to
the consulate in your home country and apply for an F
visa, the decision can me made immediately by the visa
officials there. Then there will be no delay in
your starting school and getting a paid internship
job.
|