Theresa May Will Ban Foreign Students From Working While Studying, And Force Them To Leave After Graduation

Theresa May Is Going To Make Life Even Tougher For Foreign Students
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Young women and man studding in library
Jamie Grill via Getty Images

International students in the UK will be banned from working while they are studying, and will be forced to leave when their degree finishes in an attempt to crack down on visa fraud, the Home Office has confirmed.

The reforms, which will be introduced in parliament this week, will prevent students from applying for work visas unless they leave the country first, and will no longer allow non-EU students to work for up to 10 hours a week.

Further education visas will also be cut from three years down to two, and students will be prevented from extending their studies in the UK unless they are registered at an institution with "a formal link to a university".

Immigration Minister James Brokenshire said the changes will "further protect the UK's reputation for educational excellence".

"Immigration offenders want to sell illegal access to the UK jobs market - and there are plenty of people willing to buy," he said in a statement. "Hard-working taxpayers who are helping to pay for publicly-funded colleges expect them to be providing top-class education, not a back door to a British work visa.

"Our reforms — which include introducing English language testing, removing sponsorship rights from hundreds of bogus colleges, and restricting students' access to the jobs market — are all of our plan to control immigration for the benefit of Britain."

Brokenshire added the changes would "stop immigration cheats abusing publicly-funded colleges".

Since the Conservatives came into power in 2010 around 870 bogus colleges have had their sponsorship licences removed.

Over the weekend it emerged home secretary Theresa May would be putting forward proposals to stop spouses and other dependants of non-EU postgraduates from working in the UK.

Around 100,000 student family members have been given visas in the past five years, a number which May is determined to bring down. Previous plans by May to kick out foreign students after they graduate had been blocked by Tory leaders, reportedly including George Osborne, who warned the move would damage Britain's economy.

The plans have already drawn criticism, however, for their misplaced concern.

During his time as deputy prime minister, Nick Clegg called for overseas students to be excluded from immigration figures, urging the government to adopt a flexible approach to student visas.

A 2014 study by the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) found growth fell between 2010-2013 - the first time in 29 years. At the time, the University and College Union warned that international students are choosing to go to countries "that make an effort to welcome them".

Sir Christopher Snowden, the vice-chancellor of the University of Surrey and president of Universities UK, said: "The current UK policies on immigration for international students have put the UK at a disadvantage in recruiting talented students compared with the US and Australia for example.

"This proposal will discourage legitimate students with spouses from studying here."

Around 121,000 non-EU students arrived in the UK from June 2013-14, while only 51,000 are recorded as having left, a net influx of 70,000.

"What we need to make sure – and we do have this – is that our immigration system allows those from abroad that want to come to Britain to study in our world-class universities, our fantastic colleges to come here," he said.

"But we’ve also got to have a system that doesn’t allow any abuse when people are using the right to study as a way to achieve settlement in Britain. So we’ve got to break the link and make sure it’s focused on people who want to study and then, once they’ve had their studies and completed that, then they leave."

We Are International Campaign
Adam (UK) and Jaewon (South Korea) (01 of20)
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Adam: Jaewon was an exchange student originally from my friend’s university in Seoul, so we met through a mutual friend here in Sheffield.
Fazeela (Pakistan), Azeeza (India), Alice (France), Mari (Japan), Summer, Alex, Issac, Mari, Kuo(02 of20)
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Fazeela:- Azeeza introduced me to the world of nationalities and great people.- Mari helped me make coffee and she was as excited about anime as I was.- Alice will be my French speaking partner and I love her for that.- And we all just stumbled upon Kuo :)- We all met Summer, Alex, Mari and Issac two minutes before the photo-shoot.
Daniel (Columbia) and Sarah (Scotland)(03 of20)
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We are Daniel and Sarah from Colombia and Scotland. I am a recent graduate from the University of Sheffield while Sarah is still a student, studying Hispanic Studies here. We actually didn't meet at university but in Barcelona where we were both doing British Council Language Assistantships in 2012. I have lived in several countries around the world while Sarah has also moved about a lot within the UK. We have now been together in two countries and I'm sure there will be more, further down the line.
Megan and Khadija(04 of20)
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We both met at the International Students’ Committee as the Media and Publicity Officers and we work very closely for ISC events. We Zumba together too!
Tanya (Taiwan) and Jenny (Taiwan)(05 of20)
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We met each other through a friend at a tea party. We both come from Taiwan, but we met here!!
Inhyuk (South Korea) and Laura (UK)(06 of20)
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Inhyuk: SUPER LOVELY PHOTO! THE BEST COUPLE!
Cally (UK) and Kamile (Lithuania)(07 of20)
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Kamile: The most cheerful and shiny person - my lovely beautiful Cally! Love you very much!
Direnc (Turkey) and Ihab (Iraq)(08 of20)
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Direnc: One day, the person who was working at the reception in the English Language Teaching Centre directed me to the wrong class and I met with Ihab there for 5 minutes. He is from Iraq and I am from Turkey, so we are neighbours. He is my best friend.
Tiffany (China) and Cally (UK)(09 of20)
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We met at One World Cafe, and have seen each other there every week since we met. We have also gone to the gym together, and made dumplings together for Chinese New Year. We have become really good friends really quickly!
Alice (France) and Mari (Japan)(10 of20)
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Alice: I'm from France and Mari is from Japan. We are flatmates and we really get along!Mari: I learned some french words from Alice, and she is a really enthusiastic learner of Japanese! :)
Tiffany (China) and Jana (Germany)(11 of20)
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Poppy (Spanish), Sara (Maldivian) and Oana (Romanian)(12 of20)
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We are potential housemates, pancake pals, upstairs-downstairs neighbours, module friends, lunch society funding members....our stories mostly revolve around food!
Kun (China) and Desire (Zimbabwe) (13 of20)
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Fun shot!
Galatia (Cyprus) and Amruta (India)(14 of20)
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We met through the International Students Commitee and the University of Sheffield!
Bori (Bulgaria) and Alina (Turkey)(15 of20)
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We are friends because we get on well, we do things together and we always end up having a good laug
Stathis (Greece) and Francesco (Italy)(16 of20)
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Gulsah (Turkey) with her international friends(17 of20)
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Cally (UK) and Yoon (South Korea)(18 of20)
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Cally: I did a beginners module in Korean whilst at the University of Sheffield, and we had to sign up for a language partner. My assigned language partner never got in touch, so Yoon (who was friends with my friend’s language partner) offered to be mine. We've been friends ever since. It’s interesting learning about Korea, only the other day he was telling me how different Christmas is in Korea and how you spend the day out with friends compared to with family at home in the UK.
Scott (UK) and Wei Qiang (China)(19 of20)
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Azadeh (Iran) and Tamara (Germany)(20 of20)
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Tamara: I'm from Germany and am lucky to have Azadeh, who is from Iran, not only as my colleague, but as my friend. Azadeh is one of the most generous people I know and she always treats me to some Iranian specialities which she buys in her specialist shops - mini cucumbers, fruit I hadn't come across before and other strange but (mostly) very tasty things....(with one exception...). I've also gained some insight into her culture and it's just great to have a friend and colleague who I can have a lot of fun and laughs with, and because we are both open minded, any cultural differences we may have, are an enrichment rather than pose a problem :-)Azadeh :I am so fortunate to have this opportunity to work with such a lovely colleague who was born in Germany and now living in the UK. I am trying to learn German (I am hopeless in learning new language!) but found out that some of the words they use, we already use them in Farsi, like autobahn - Her bubbly personality makes it easy for me to discuss and talk about each other’s culture and have a good laugh about it.I learnt and still learning from her not only work-wise but life-wise too. She was my mentor at work, patiently answered my questions even when she was very busy. Not only she is very kind and generous, she is very funny and I love her sense of humour. Her friendship is priceless to me....