This is the VOA Special English Education Report.
This
week in our Foreign Student Series, we discuss rules about getting a job while
studying in the United States.
International students are
permitted to work for the college or university they attend or for a business
at the school. But the business must directly provide a service to students. You
could work at the bookstore, for example, but not for a construction company
that is building something on campus. Also, a foreign student cannot displace
an American citizen in a job.
International students can work twenty hours a week
while attending classes; more during school breaks. You can work until you complete
your studies.
Foreign
students normally cannot take a job that has no connection to their school. But
the government may give permission if students are suddenly faced with a situation
that is out of their control. Examples include large medical bills, the loss of
financial aid or an unexpected change in the financial condition of their
source of support.
Students must also meet
other conditions. They must have attended their American school for at least
one year. Government approval is given on a case-by-case basis. Students must
re-apply after a year if they want to continue an off-campus job.
Foreign
students who will be attending graduate school can apply for some jobs before
they come to the United States. A good example is a university job like a teaching
or research assistantship.
Some schools pay their assistants. Others provide free education
in return. Many do both.
Graduate
assistants might teach, give tests, grade work, assist professors with research
and hold office hours. Many universities now provide language training to
foreign teaching assistants to help them improve their English. Some schools require
foreign students to pass an English speaking test before they are permitted to
teach.
International
student offices at schools have to provide information on students each term to
the Department of Homeland Security. Students who violate the terms of their
visa -- for example, by working off-campus without permission -- could be sent
home.
And
that's the VOA Special English Education Report, written by Nancy Steinbach. Our
Foreign Student Series continues next week. The earlier reports are at
voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Jim Tedder in Washington.