• Thursday, April 25, 2024

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Indian students get UK jobs boost

PILOT PLAN: Brandon Lewis

By: JurmoloyaRava

SCHEME ALLOWS SIX-MONTH STAY AFTER COURSE

BRITAIN on Monday (18) announced extending pilot student visa scheme to 23 additional universities will give students fr-om India and non-EU countries six months to find a job upon completion of their course.

It also provides greater support for stu­dents who wish to switch to a work visa and take up a graduate role by allowing them to remain in the UK for six months after they have finished their course.

Immigration minister Brandon Lewis said: “I am delighted to announce the ex­pansion of this pilot which is part of our on­going activity to ensure that our world-lead­ing institutions remain highly competitive.”

Universities taking part in the scheme will be responsible for eligibility checks, which means that students have to submit fewer documents than required in the current process alongside their visa applications.

The scheme was introduced last year on a pilot basis at Oxford, Bath and Cambridge University as well as Imperial College London.

In its second year, the pilot scheme aims to streamline the process for international students looking to pursue a masters’ course of 13 months or fewer in the UK.

Among the additional 23 universities to benefit from the scheme are two in Scot­land, two in Wales, one in Northern Ireland and others from across England.

“This is a clear indication that genuine students are welcome and there is no limit on the number who can come to study in the UK,” the minister said.

Britain continues to be the second most popular destination for international stu­dents, he added, with the number of foreign students increasing by 24 per cent since 2010.

Under the scheme, all students will con­tinue to require home office security and iden­tity checks, and applicants who do not meet current immigration rules will be refused.

Indian students account for approximate­ly 9,600 visas granted in 2016 (seven per cent), but in 2010 they accounted for around one in five of visas granted at 40,500.

Between April 2016 and April 2017, over 7,400 Indian students left Britain before the expiry of their student visas with only 2,209 choosing to extend their visas, according to the Office of National Statistics data.

Professor Sir Keith Burnett, president and vice-chancellor of the University of Sheffield and founder of the UK-wide #WeAreInternational campaign said: “In­ternational students are crucial not only to UK scholarship and teaching, but they play a huge role in the life and economy of towns and cities right across the UK.

“The extension of the Tier-4 visa pilot is therefore very welcome for all those univer­sities and students who will benefit from it.

“I also hope that the experience of ex­tending the pilot will give the UK the assur­ance it needs to further extend the pilot into mainstream policy for the good of the many talented students from around the world who wish to study in the UK,” he added.

Burnett also said that we do know that more needs to be done. “The #WeAreInter­national campaign will continue to work with universities up and down the country, as well as businesses and the National Un­ion of Students, to make sure the value of international students is fully reflected in all aspects of government policy.

“We can increase opportunities for tal­ented international graduates to remain in the UK for a period of work experience once they complete their studies. This will bring us in line with the experience in many other countries and the needs of our own econo­my,” he said.

[TheChamp-Sharing]

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