Issue

Overseas students and immigration

Submitted by: Cece's Profile | 3 comments  VIEW COMMENTS

As an overseas student, you currently hold a Study Visa. If you want to continue to work and live in Australia, you need to apply for permanent residency by obtaining a Skilled Migration Visa. In order to satisfy the Skilled Migration Visa criteria, you as an applicant must collect enough points to pass the requirements set by the DIMIA. The visa point calculating system is relatively complicated and changes on a regular basis (every few months); points are calculated according to:
- skill: the degree, diploma or trade qualification you as a student are to complete;
- age: an age of below 30 will score you higher points;
- English level: assessed according to the International English Language Testing System
- complete degree: whether you’ve passed all the required courses!
- regional campus: regional campuses that are remotely situated from the metropolitan areas will score you higher points


The technical stuff

The point criterion system is updated regularly by the DIMIA, therefore it is strongly recommended that you stay tuned to their announcement to change or consult a reputable migration agent. So what does a point criteria assessment or the Skilled Migration Visa look like? For example, as at April 2005, the points required was set at 120, where various parameters contribute to a satisfactory total:
- skill: 60 pts
- age (under 30): 30 pts
- English: 20 pts
- regional campus: 5 pts
- complete degree: 5 pts
TOTAL: 120 pts

Different courses equip you with occupational skills that would earn you different amount of points – this is determined in the Skilled Occupation list by the Australian Government. The “skill” parameter qualifies for either 40, 50 or a maximum of 60 points, depending on whether that skill is in demand in Australia. Job sectors that experience labour shortage demand workers that possess skills for that occupational field, therefore the Australian government award more points (at highest 60 points) to attract skilled migrants to work in these skill demanding sectors – known as the Migration Occupations in Demand List (MODL). You as a student are recommended to “shop” for a course that will attract a higher point rating. In addition, you may also wish to consider studying on a regional campus to score you a bonus of 5 more points!

So now you have a fair idea on how the system works. However, don’t just enrol for the course, sit back and relax until course completion because that’s NOT it! The Australian Government makes an effort to ensure their visa applicants are responsible students, therefore education providers note down the attendance rate of every student to track whether you actually turn up to class – a pass percentage attendance rate is set at 80%. If you miss out on too many classes, you will risk your Study Visa being cancelled!


Act on it!

Yes this is overwhelming – unfortunately this is the real world! However, help is luckily only a few clicks away. The following are a couple of useful tips:
- constantly visit the DIMIA website to be informed about changes at http://www.immi.gov.au/
- consult with a reputable migration agent. Make sure s/he is registered (enquire for the Migration Agent Number) and preferably a member of the Migration Institute of Australia http://www.mia.org.au)
- consult with your campus counsellor
- make sure your degree/course will equip you the skill that falls within the MODL


Note from author:
-- I’m designing a Website for a migration agent. Her case studies (files of her clients) and also an interview with her gave me an insight view and also good reference links to Australian migration regulations. Many Australian university have comprehensive and detailed information about Study visas – be sure to check out their international office. --
Discuss Now 3 comments

CMatloub 04-Apr-2008

This article is really interesting, does anyone know how Australia's student immigration policy compares with other western countries? i.e. Is it stricter or more lenient?

Tiara Shafiq 06-Jun-2007

Since this article was published, there have been some changes to this process. I'm not quite sure of the specifics, but the skill points don't matter as much and you can apply for an 18-month visa to get work experience.

I lose out under this visa scheme (old or new) because my skills, experience, and degree can't be neatly summed up into one job description! They need something for multitaskers...

RonPrice 18-Mar-2007

LETTER WRITING 2 JOBS A WEEK FOR 40 YEARS
JOB HUNTING 1961-2003:
THE OVERSEAS STUDENT EXPERIENCE: IN RETROSPECT
___________________________
I WAS ONCE AN OVERSEAS STUDENT, AN OVERSEAS TEACHER AND NOW I'M A PERMANENT RESIDENT OVERSEAS
(and I will lay my bones in this overseas location: you might enjoy some of this story)
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The information and details in my resume, a resume I no longer use in the job-hunting world, should help anyone wanting to know something about my professional background, my writing and my life. This resume might be useful for the few who want to assess my suitability for some advertised/unadvertised employment position which, I must emphasize again, I never apply for anymore. I stopped applying for full-time jobs four years ago in 2001 and part-time ones in 2003. I also left the world of volunteer activity, except for work in one international organization, the Baha’i Faith, two years ago. The age of 62 sees me self-employed as a writer-poet. I gradually came to this role in the years after I left full-time employment in 1999, seven years ago.

Not being occupied with earning a living and giving myself to 60 hours a week in a job and many other hours to community activity marked a turning point for me so that I could devote my time to a much more extensive involvement in writing. Writing is for most of its votaries a solitary and hopefully stimulating leisure-time-parttime-fulltime pursuit. In my case in these early years of my late adulthood, writing is full-time about 60 hours a week.1 I have replaced paid employment and activity with people in community with a form of work which is also a form of leisure, namely, writing and reading.

Inevitably the style of one's writing and what one reads is a reflection of the person, their experience and their philosophy. For many years I set out this experience in an attachment which followed this introduction.2 If, as Carl Jung writes, we are what we do, then some of what I was could be found in that attachment. That document may seem over-the-top as they say these days since it went on for nearly 20 pages, but forty years in the professional job world produced a great pile of stuff/things. That document I have not updated here. It was the last resume I used when I was in the job hunting game in 2003. I have made it available, when appropriate, and updated it, of course, to include many of the writing projects I have taken on during these first years of my retirement from full-time, part-time and volunteer activity.

The resume has always been the piece of writing, the statement, the document, the entry ticket which, over the years, has opened up the possibilities of another adventure, another pioneering move to another town, another state or country, another location, work in another organization, another portion of my life. I'm sure that will also be the case in the years of my late adulthood(60-80) and old age(80++) should, for some reason, movement from place to place be necessary or desired. But this seems unlikely as I go through these early years of late adulthood and head into the last stages of my life.

In the last two years which are the first of my late adulthood and in early retirement(1999 to 2006), I have been able to write to a much greater extent than I had been able in my early and middle adulthood(1965 to 2004) when job, family and the demands of various community projects kept my nose to the grindstone as they say colloquially. And now, with the unloading of much of the volunteer work I took on from 1999-2005, with my last child having left home in 2005 and a more settled home environment than I’ve ever had, the years of late adulthood(age 60 to 80) beckon bright with promise. My resume reflects this shift in my activity-base.

The process of frequent moves and frequent jobs which was my pattern for forty years is not everyone's style or modus vivendi. Many millions of people live and die in the same town, city or state and their life's adventure takes place within that physical region, the confines of a relatively small place and, perhaps, a very few jobs in their lifetime. Physical movement is not essential to psychological and spiritual growth, nor is a long list of jobs, although some degree of inner change, some inner shifting is just about inevitable, or so it seems to me, especially in these recent decades. For many millions of people during the years 1961-2001, my years of being jobbed, the world was my and their oyster, not so much in the manner of a tourist, although there was plenty of that, but rather in terms of working lives which came to be seen increasingly in a global context.

This was true for me during those years when I was looking for amusement, education and experience, some stimulating vocation and avocation, some employment security and comfort, my adventurous years of pioneering, my applying-for-job days, the forty year period 1961-2001. My resume altered many times, of course, during those forty years is now for the most part, as I indicated above, not used in these years of my retirement, except as an information, bio-data, vehicle for interested readers.

This document is a useful backdrop for those examining my writing, especially my poetry, although some poets regard their CV, resume, bio-data, lifeline, life-story, personal background as irrelevant to their work. I frequently use this resume at various website locations on the Internet when I want to provide some introductory background on myself, indeed, I could list many new uses after forty years of only one use--to help me get a job, make more money, experience some enrichment to my life, etcetera. The use of the resume saves one from having to reinvent the wheel, so to speak. I don't have to say it all again in resume after resume to the point of utter tedium as I did so frequently when applying for jobs, especially in the days before the email and the internet. A few clicks of one’s personal electronic-computer system and some aspect of life’s game goes on or comes to a quick end at the other end of the electronic set of wires.

During those job-hunting years 1961-2001 I applied for some four thousand jobs, an average of two a week for each of those forty years! This is a guesstimation, of course, as accurate a guesstimation as I can calculate for this forty year period. The great bulk of the thousands of letters involved in this vast, detailed and, from time to time, exhausting and frustrating process, I did not keep. I did keep a small handful of perhaps half a dozen of those letters in a file in the Letters: Section VII, Sub-Section X of my autobiographical work, Pioneering Over Four Epochs. Given the thousands of hours over forty years devoted to the job-hunting process; given the importance of this key to the pioneering venture that is my life; given the amount of paper produced and energy expended in the process; given the amount of writing done in the context of these various jobs,3 some of the correspondence seemed to warrant a corner in the written story of my life.4

It seemed appropriate, at least it was my desire, to write this short statement fitting all those thousands of resumes into a larger context. The things we do when we retire!5
__________________________FOOTNOTES_____________________________1 This involves reading, posting on the internet, developing my own website and writing in several genres.
2 My resume is only included with this statement when it seems appropriate, on request or in my autobiography.
3 Beginning with the summer job I had in the Canadian Peace Research Institute in 1964, I wrote an unnumbered quantity of: summaries, reports, essays, evaluations, subject notes, inter alia, in my many jobs. None of that material has been kept in any of my files and, over 40 years, it amounted to literally millions, an uncountable number, of words.
4 The Letters section of my autobiography now occupies some 25 arch-lever files and two-ring binders and covers the period 1960 to 2006. I guesstimate the collection contains about 3000 letters. This does not include these thousands of job applications and their replies, thousands of emails now and an unnumbered quantity of in-house letters at places where I was employed. I have kept, as I say above, about half a dozen to a dozen of these letters.

Note: Since about 1990 thousands of emails have been sent to me and replies have been written but, like the job application, most have been deleted from any potential archive. For the most part these deleted emails seem to have no long term value in an archive of letters. They were deleted as quickly as they came in. Of course there are other emails, nearly all of the correspondence I have sent and received since about 1990 to 1995 which would once have been in the form of letters, is now in the form of emails. They are kept in my letter-files.
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