Hello everybody,
I hope this message finds you well.
Whether I would advise a student to go to US would merely depend on what the student plans to do, if a person plans to come to the USA to study with the purpose to acquire a professional experience before she comes back to her country, then I would highly advise her to go to another country other than US where there are far better opportunities for international students than USA offers.
In US you only are allowed to work 20 hours on campus but not outside. As many students apply for positions inside the campus, your chances are little to be hired.
As an international student, once you finish your studies and graduate, you are allowed to work for one year (it is called OPT) then come back to your country unless you are a STEM graduate student graduating in Computer Science for instance, which will give you 3 years to work instead of one.
However, based on my friends' experiences and mine, the ugly reality is that the American system laughs at and dupes international students and takes advantage of them, it absorbs their money then sends them back to their countries. As a graduate student with a double Associate Degree in Business Administration and in Economy + a double Bachelor Degree in Global Supply Chain management and in Business Administration, I consider I paid a huge amount of money that I could have used for things more important.
The trick is that from one end, the government grants you generally 1 year to work in your field of studies after you graduate, while on the other end, most companies are not interested in F-1 or OPT students who are ready to work for just a year, thus rejects them, which means you are in between and you may have no choice but leave sooner than a year as you are not allowed to stay over 90 days unemployed. Companies do not want to train people who are going to leave them after a short period of time, they need someone who will stick with them. Most of the times, you will not get a professional experience during this year, not due to lack of skills or experience, but because you are neither a Citizen nor a Green Card holder. To check whether my words are true, go to any website where companies hire, 95% of the time if not more, you'll find them displaying a note in their employment application, generally in the bottom, saying clearly that "IF YOU ARE NOT A CITIZEN OR A GREEN CARD HOLDER, DO NOT APPLY" or while you fill the application, you'll be asked whether you'll need "SPONSORSHIP" in the future. If you say YES, then you are OUT.
I have some friends of mine who have extensive professional experience in their field of studies like Finance, they received calls numerous times from companies interested in their profiles. When they got asked about their status, and they answer with "F-1 or OPT", the recruiters immediately apologize telling them that they do not accept international students or F-1 graduate students.
The best scenario ever that can happen to you is to get a company that is willing to sponsor you, which is rare in US, if you get to compare it with the majority of countries in Europe for example where sponsorship is a common practice. This scenario happened to me, I had a company that was willing to help me stay in US and work for them by sponsoring me. What happens when a company wants to sponsor you, they apply for you for a visa called H1B every first week of April once a year, at that moment you work (if your OPT is still valid) and you wait for the results where 65,000 H1b applicants are chosen. If you are among the ones who got picked up, CONGRATULATIONS! you are on an H1B VISA and you can focus solely on your job. Nonetheless, if you don't get chosen in the H1B lottery that year, you have to keep on studying full-time along with your full-time job to stay legal after your OPT expires until you get picked up in the lottery (It may take 1 year as it may take several years, or perhaps never). In other words, you are welcome to work as long as you keep on spending your money bombarding yourself with useless theory.
In my case, the disadvantage I had is that my OPT (1 year) was about to expire in approximately 3 months, so for you as an international student to keep on working legally after this 1 year period (only if the company is willing to sponsor you, thus apply for you for the H1B visa) is to apply for a university and keep on studying things you may wish or not wish to study, because you have no choice. After thinking deeply, I found out it is like pouring water over the sand as I was going to earn some money from one side and spend it on "education" just to stay legal. That's what I would call pure SLAVERY.
If a person would like to go to US to learn English, I would highly encourage you to do so. However, you must be careful on which institutions you are planning to attend, for many friends of mine have attended schools like EF School, and they have told me that practically they do not learn anything substantial. At the end of the program, they provide certificates to people certifying they have mastered the English language, while I remember a friend of mine (a Swiss guy) I used to know could not even formulate one sentence correctly after 7 months studying there. This kind of schools do not care much about what you learn, it's all about business, as long as you pay the money, they'll give you a certificate to please you and delude you into thinking you learned something. As a result, If you are serious about learning English, then I would strongly advise you to go for a semester in a community college or in a university, it is more loaded and more strict. In my humble opinion, that is where you are going to learn English for real.
The only case I would advise someone to come and study at a university would be if you want to live in US and found your family there by getting married before you finish your degree so that you can be able to take advantage of the opportunities out there, such as paying far less than what international students pay, get financial aid, be able to work outside the campus while studying etc...
To close this long subject, I don't think at all that the American education is any different than many other countries' educational systems, except that it may be easier from the standpoint where you do not have to learn everything by heart to go to the exams. It's all about essays and quizzes. But believe me, in the majority of majors, once you get out, you will probably retain nothing in your brain. I believe that education in America has been overpraised and is quite expensive than deserved while I can guarantee you that the BEST SCHOOL or UNIVERSITY is what You learn by YOURSELF.
If you want to spend money on education, go to Australia, New Zealand, Canada or many other countries in Europe that offer great opportunities for international students while they are studying as well as after they graduate, they may even help you become a citizen to fully enjoy the benefits one of these countries offer to their citizens, not just like in US (USE YOU and THROW YOU AWAY).
I am not discouraging you to not go to United States, it is a great country to visit and experience, but NOW you KNOW what many people would never tell you, that is the bitter truth. After all, It's up to you to make your decision. It is out of love that I am writing all of this, for I wish I knew this before I came to US. However, I do not regret the fact I went there, for it was a great experience. I hope this helps.
Thank you!
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