Tuesday 14 July 2015

All part-time work rights for non-EU students studying at publicly funded colleges to be abolished

It is expected that the scrapping of work rights for non EU students will be enforced from August and the other changes to be implemented in Autumn,

The summary of changes
  • Non-EU students at publicly funded colleges lose right to work for up to 10 hours a week, matching rule for those at privately funded colleges
  • The length of further education visas will be reduced from three years to two.
  • FE college students will not be able to stay and work in UK when they finish their course, unless they leave the country first (will be exempted if they are registered at an institution with a formal link to a university)

Sunday 14 June 2015

Summary of Recent Changes to UK Student Visa 2015 / 2014

Summary of Recent Changes to UK Student Visa 2015 / 2014



With the implementation of Immigration Act 2014, a New health surcharge is to be introduced from next month, further with the introduction of Immigration act 2014, the appeal rights in most cases will be replaced by a system of administrative review also landlords will be required to check the immigration status of prospective tenants (ie students)

Below is a summary of new student visa rules / changes (2014/ 2015), new changes to Immigration Act 2014 and other reviews

Introduction of the Immigration Health Charge –From 6th April, 2015 
For all immigration applications made on or after the 6 April 2015.

The immigration health surcharge will cost:
  • £150 for students and their dependants 
  • £200 for other applicants e.g. Tier 1 (Graduate Entrepreneur), Tier 2 and Tier 5 Youth Mobility 

The sum is an annual amount and you will be charged the annual amount for each year of the maximum period of leave at the point you apply for your visa. For example, an undergraduate student will pay an extra £450 at the time of their student visa application to UK. This additional charge is mandatory failure to pay can lead to your visa being refused.

The following groups are exempt:
  • Entry clearance applications for 6 months or less; 
  • Visitor visa applications (except the extended Student Visitor route) 
  • Nationals of Australia and New Zealand, and British Overseas Territories Citizens who are resident in the Falkland Islands.


    No more Appeals - Appeals replaced with Administrative Review
    For Tier 4 applications made on or after 20 October 2014, the Appeals process for refusals has been replaced by Administrative Review (AR). An AR is when the Home Office reviews the decision-making process made by the caseworker when considering the application. It is not a legal process handled by the Immigration Tribunal

    Administrative review requires a payment of £80 for a single decision, or a decision on applications by a main applicant and dependants. It must be refunded if the outcome of the administrative review is that the decision is withdrawn.

    More detail on administrative review could be found here


    Increase in visa application fees from April 2015 
    • The new fees will be as below: 
    • Tier 4 (General) application outside the UK - £322 
    • Tier 4 (General) standard application in Country (in UK) - £439 
    • Tier 4 (General) premium application - £839 
    • Student Visitor - £85 
    • Tier 1 (Graduate Entrepreneur) in the UK - £456 
    • Tier 1 (Graduate Entrepreneur) outside the UK - £335


    New Visa Issue Procedure (Out of Country Applications)
    The UK Government is changing the way that it issues permission for people to come to the UK (UK Student Visa) from abroad for more than six months.

    When you apply for your Tier 4 visa, you will be granted with an endorsement in your passport (vignette or sticker inside your passport) which is your visa to enter the UK. If your visa is granted for a period of 6 months or more, you will only be given a 30-day visa in your passport as a leave to enter the UK. You must arrange to enter the UK within that 30 day period. Along with your visa and passport, you will also receive a written notification (or decision letter) informing you to collect a longer term visa from a designated Post Office branch once you have arrived in the UK. Your long term visa is called a biometric residence permit (BRP) and is in the form of a credit card sized card with a chip which will contain your biometric information.

    Timetable for BRP roll-out

    As this is a new procedure for UK visa applications made outside the UK, it is currently not compulsory for everyone to have a BRP. This new procedure will be introduced in stages and the estimated roll-out will affect UK visa applications made in the following countries as follows:

    Phase 1 – 18 March 2015 - Pakistan

    Phase 2 - Mid April 2015 (estimated, subject to the exact date legislation comes into force)

    Armenia
    Cambodia
    Estonia
    Iceland
    Laos
    Nepal
    Bangladesh
    China
    Finland
    India
    Libya
    Netherlands
    Bhutan
    Cyprus
    Germany
    Indonesia
    Maldives

    Burma
    Denmark
    Gibraltar
    Italy
    Malta


    Phase 3 - 31 May 2015

    Afghanistan
    Bermuda
    Falkland Islands
    Malaysia
    Philippines
    Taiwan
    Ascension Island
    Brunei
    Fiji
    Mongolia
    Qatar
    Trinidad & Tobago
    Australia
    Canada
    Guyana
    New Zealand
    St Helena
    United Arab Emirates
    Bahamas
    Cayman Islands
    Iran
    Nigeria
    St Lucia
    USA
    Bahrain
    Dominican Republic
    Jamaica
    Oman
    Singapore
    Yemen
    Barbados
    Egypt
    Japan
    Papua New Guinea
    South Korea


    Phase 4 - 31 July 2015 - Rest of the world

    Finally, a brief guide on how to apply for UK Student Visa
    (The Requirements for Tier 4 General Student Entry Clearance: How to make your application)

    Before making any type of application for immigration permission, you should read the appropriate current Tier 4 General policy guidance thoroughly.

    • Obtain your Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies (CAS) from your University
    • Check if you need an ATAS clearance certificate,  (ATAS clearance is required for some taught postgraduate and many science and technology related research subjects.)
    • Obtain appropriate evidence to meet the maintenance/ funding requirements.
    • Complete the relevant visa application form Online (Unless you are a national of Cuba or North Korea)
    • If you wish to bring your family member(s) or partner with you as a Dependant, please remember to include them in your application. Please read the PBS Dependent Guidance on the additional maintenance requirements for Dependants.
    • As a part of your Tier 4 visa application (UK Student Visa Application), you may be required to attend an interview with the UK Home Office /UK Embassy or High Commission

    Friday 30 January 2015

    65 Colleges Licences Revoked, 600 Plus Students Removed or Detained

    Last yearThe UK government revoked the licences of 54 plus private colleges, since then, according to Home Office sources more than 1,600 enforcement visits have been made and over 600 individuals have been served removal notices or detained in relation to curtailment of student visa matters

    Amid upcoming elections the number one issue has become Immigration according to the recent opinion polls and pressure has flown down from political hierarchy to authorities such as UKVI to exercise more grip on Immigration, also additional measures has been introduced to crack down on bogus students which included recent measures such as mandatory landlord checks on tenants’ immigration status, which are currently being trialled in the West Midlands.

    One of the trigger in this ongoing crack down is with fraud in English language testing system detected last year - now more than 33,725 invalid TOEIC test results have been reported by ETS Global to the Home Office, along with 22,694 questionable results – up from 19,000 and 29,000 respectively at the time of the original announcement and investigation.

    Crack down on student visa scams is not unique to UK it is a common trend in many countries, in Australia the number of student visas cancelled by the Australian government has more than tripled in the last two years (according to The Australian that student visa cancellations more than doubled from 1,978 in 2012 to 4,940 in 2013, rising again to 7,061 in the last financial year) as instances of falsified test results and/or financial documents have soared, we reckon this trend is not only purely on irregularities on student front and private tier institutions but also stems largely from the popular dis comfort of Immigrants in the wider society thus has become a political issue

    We at UKEducationForAll.com kindly urge that all Sponsors who take students from institutions whose licences have been revoked will need to undertake their normal compliance checks and there is no reason in principle why they should not accept such students who have not, individually, been found to be at fault

    Friday 24 October 2014

    List of suspended or revoked colleges as of 24th October, 2014

    The UK government has revoked the licences of 54 private colleges as of 23rd October, 2014, in its investigation into immigration fraud launched in June. The institutions were among 57 centres to have their licences suspended by the Home Office (Refer our earlier post)

    Simon Walker, director-general of the Institute of Directors, said he was "appalled" by how overseas students had been caught up in targets for reducing immigration into the UK. “Universities were victims of political point-scoring”, said Mr Walker.

    We at UKEducationForAll.com kindly urge that all Sponsors who take students from institutions whose licences have been revoked will need to undertake their normal compliance checks and there is no reason in principle why they should not accept such students who have not, individually, been found to be at fault.

    We like to emphasise that Institutions who have their licences revoked still have a duty of care in ensuring that their students complete their studies and we firmly expect that they will honour this and assist in making appropriate arrangements.

    Students, who are still unclear or concerned about their immigration status should contact Home Office on 0114 207 1688 (UK) or 0044 114 207 1688 (outside UK) between 9:00am and 5:00pm, Monday to Friday and 9:00am to 1:00pm on Saturday.

    The following Colleges can no longer recruit or teach international students (Licenses Revoked or Surrendered)

    1. Alpha Meridian College – Revoked

    2. APS Computer Solutions Ltd Trading As Pitman Training Centre Peterborough – Revoked

    3. Birmingham Institute of Education Training and Technology – Revoked

    4. Blake Hall College – Revoked

    5. Bradford College of Management – Surrendered

    6. Bradford Metropolitan College – Revoked

    7. Bradford Regional College – Revoked

    8. Bristol College of Accountancy – Revoked

    9. Britain College – Surrendered

    10.CAHRO Academy Ltd – Revoked

    11.Central College London (a division of Huawen Institute) – Revoked

    12.Central Cranbrook College – Revoked

    13.Citizen 2000 Education Institute – Revoked

    14.City of London Academy – Revoked

    15.College of Advanced Studies – Revoked

    16.College of East London – Revoked

    17.College of Excellence Limited – Revoked

    18.Essex College Ltd – Revoked

    19.Eynsford College – Revoked

    20.Forbes Graduate School – Revoked

    21.Hammersmith Management College – Revoked

    22.Helios International College – Revoked

    23.Interlink College of Technology and Business Studies – Revoked

    24.Katherine and King's College of London – Revoked

    25.Kinnaird College – Revoked

    26.LIT LON Ltd – Revoked

    27.London Academy of Management and Business (LAMB) – Surrendered

    28.London Churchill College – Surrendered

    29.London College of Finance and Accounting – Revoked

    30.London College of Business Management and Computing Studies –Surrendered

    31.London Corporate College – Revoked

    32.London Metropolitan College – Revoked

    33.London Premier College Limited – Revoked

    34.London Regal College – Revoked

    35.London School of Marketing Trading As LS Business School – Revoked

    36.London School of Technology – Revoked

    37.London St. Andrew's College – Revoked

    38.Manchester College of Management Sciences Limited – Revoked

    39.Manchester International College – Revoked

    40.Manchester Trinity College Limited – Revoked

    41.Midlands Academy of Business and Technology – Revoked

    42.North West College Reading – Revoked

    43.Pharez UK Ltd Trading As Pharez College – Revoked

    44.Queensbury College – Revoked

    45.Radcliffe College – Revoked

    46.Sanjari International College – Revoked

    47.Shakespeare College – Revoked

    48.Stanfords College UK Limited – Revoked

    49.Superior College London – Revoked

    50.UK Business Academy – Revoked

    51.UK Vocational Training College Trading As UK College of Arts and

    Technology – Revoked

    52.Vernon Community College – Revoked

    53.West George College – Revoked

    54.West London Business College Ltd – Revoked

    As at 23 October 15:00



    Reference


    Wednesday 25 June 2014

    Home office crack down on Visa fraud

    An estimated 48,000 immigrants may have fraudulently obtained English language certificates despite being unable to speak English, the government has said, Of the 48,000 certificates, 29,000 were invalidand 19,000 were "questionable". said Immigration Minister James Brokenshire.

    Glyndwr University has lost its ‘highly trusted’ sponsor status after the test scores of more than 230 students it sponsored were identified as being invalid, while the University of West London (UWL) and the University of Bedfordshire have been barred from sponsoring new international students pending further investigations to decide whether they will also be suspended.

    Nearly 300 overseas students at the private London School of Business and Finance (LSBF) worked and paid tax last year, with one student working 60 hours a week for six months.

    In an investigation, HMRC found that some of the students were earning £ 20 000 per year despite rules preventing them from working 20 hours per week during term time.

    “London campuses are home to a high proportion of international students, and QAA has been in discussions with the Home Office over the best way to protect their interests.”

    In a latest development, The QAA, The Higher education watch dog has written to 14 universities about their London operations

    The Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education (QAA) is conducting an independent inquiry into higher education delivered via London branch campuses

    Full list of universities included in the QAA inquiry:

    Anglia Ruskin University
    Bangor University
    Coventry University
    University of Cumbria
    University of East Anglia
    Glasgow Caledonian University
    Glyndwr University
    University of Liverpool
    Loughborough University
    Northumbria University
    University of Sunderland
    University of Ulster
    University of Wales Trinity St David
    University of South Wales


    Full list of suspended colleges in 2014
    Be the first to learn about...Updates on UK education policy, Updates on student visa matters, College/University rankings, Etc... Subscribe Today to Receive New Posts straight in to your Inbox ##About http://www.ukeducationforall.com, Disclaimer Policy and Privacy Policy##: All information or other content, including, but not limited to, opinions or statements and advice, made on the site are those of Rushdy Razak(Chief Editor) here in known as Editor or respective authors, not of www.ukeducationforall.com and should not necessarily be relied upon. www.ukeducationforall.com does not essentially approve, support, authorize, encourage or agree with the comments, opinions or statements of any information or other content on the site and does not in any way guarantee the accuracy, reliability, usefulness or completeness thereof. Under no circumstances will www.ukeducationforall.com or the Editor be responsible for any damage or loss arising from anyone's reliance on information or other content shown on the site, or transmitted or otherwise communicated to users of www.ukeducationforall.com. The information provided by this blog/website is solely for advisory basis and originates from its information sources and personal opinions of the writers, the opinions or the projected outlook presented by the editor not connected or influenced by any vendors, institutions or institutions he works for