M-1 visa

The M-1 visa is a type of student visa in the U.S. reserved for international students attending vocational schools and technical schools.[1]

Application process

In order to obtain an M-1 visa for traveling to the United States, a student must present a signed Form I-20 at a United States embassy or consulate in the student's home country.[2] The I-20 is issued by a designated school official, typically the international student adviser, after the student has fulfilled a school's admissions requirements and presented proof of financial resources. Often, the person is a student at a community college or junior college providing vocational training or technical training and awards associate degrees; a vocational high school; a trade school; or a school of non-academic training other than language training.[3] An applicant must have a fixed residence outside the U.S. that the applicant intends to maintain in order to be approved for an M-1 visa.[4]

The application of a person seeking an M-1 visa to attend flight school must also include the specific reason for the flight training, the applicant's current employer and job position, the name and relationship of the person paying for the flight training, the applicant's most recent flight certifications and ratings, the aircraft's type and certified take-off weight to be trained on, and the applicant's current rank or title if presently actively employed as a pilot.[5]

Duration of status

A person with an M visa may enter the U.S. up to 30 days prior to the report date or start date of the course of study printed on the Form I-20. A person is admitted into the U.S. under M-1 status for a fixed time period, typically the period necessary to complete the course of study indicated on the Form I-20, plus time for Optional Practical Training after completion of studies, plus an additional 30 days to depart the U.S.[6][7] The student's total stay in M-1 status in the U.S. may not exceed one year, unless approved for an extension for medical reasons. When the person enters the U.S., the person's I-94 Arrival-Departure Record Card is stamped with a date, unlike students with an F-1 visa.

A person in M-1 status is considered unlawfully present in the U.S. if the person's Form I-94 expires, the specified date of the person's admission has passed, or either an immigration judge or the Board of Immigration Appeals has ordered that an alien be excluded, deported, or removed.[8][9] If a student violates their status, the student may be considered unlawfully present in the U.S. immediately, and the student would not be eligible for the thirty-day grace period to depart the U.S.[8] A person who accrues between 180 and 365 days of unlawful presence in the U.S. may be prohibited from reentering the U.S. for three years after leaving the U.S.[10] A person who accrues more than one year of unlawful presence in the U.S. from reentering the U.S. for ten years after leaving the U.S.[10] A person with unlawful presence who leaves the U.S. before the age of 18 1/2, however, will not receive bans for unlawful presence.[11]

A student's M-1 status may be extended if the student continues to be a nonimmigrant maintaining student status, the student has compelling educational reasons or medical reasons (but not academic probation or academic suspension) that caused the delay, and the student can and intends to maintain student status for the extended period.[12] A student's M-1 status may not be extended longer than three years and 30 days from the student's original start date.[12] A student cannot receive extensions if the student cannot complete the course of study within three years of the original program start date, including any decreases in course load.[12]

Spouse and children

The spouse and minor children of a student in M-1 status are typically eligible to enter the U.S. in M-2 status.[13] At time of entry to the U.S., the spouse and minor children must each present an original SEVIS Form I-20 issued in the name of each family member.[13]

Work authorization

While studying, student in M-1 status is not allowed to work on-campus or off-campus.[1]

Optional Practical Training

M-1 students are eligible for a relatively short amount of Optional Practical Training: one month for every four months of study. While an F-1 student can simply file an I-765 Application for Employment Authorization, an M-1 student must also file an I-539 to extend status. The applications are adjudicated at various United States Citizenship and Immigration Services service centers around the country, which sometimes have varying interpretations of the regulations. An application for Optional Practical Training should include the following.

  • cover letter explaining the student's situation
  • Form I-765
  • $410 filing fee payable to Department of Homeland Security
  • signed I-20 with Optional Practical Training request (copies are not accepted)
  • copy of visa and passport photo page
  • 2 passport photos
  • copy of original I-20 and original financial documents
  • current bank statement
  • Form I-539
  • $370 filing fee made out to Department of Homeland Security
  • copy of both side of I-94 card

It is also advisable to include a copy of each application, since the I-765 and I-539 will be adjudicated separately at the service center. The result of an approved I-765 will be an Optional Practical Training card, also known as an Employment Authorization Document. The result of an approved I-539 will be a new I-94 departure card, which the student surrenders upon leaving the United States, to prove that he has left. A student may begin paid work upon receiving the OPT card (and applying for a social security number) even if the I-94 card has not arrived.

If the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services requires more information for either application, United States Citizenship and Immigration Services will send a request for evidence. Occasionally these requests are for items that were sent in originally; nevertheless, it is best to send them in again immediately. Approvals or denials will arrive separately and after different amounts of time.

Course of study

Students in M-1 status must maintain a full course of study.[14]

Students at a community college or junior college must take at least 12 credit hours as long as that is considered a full-time student by the educational institution.[14][15] Post-secondary vocational students usually must take at least 18 hours per week of classroom instruction or, if predominantly a shop-based or laboratory-based curriculum, at least 22 hours per week of instruction.[14][15] Students at a vocational high school or another nonacademic high school usually must attend classes for at least the minimum number of hours per week that the school considers normal progress towards graduation.[15]

Online classes and distance-education classes that do not require physical attendance are not allowed to count toward the full course of study of a student in M-1 status.[15]

If the student must take less than a full course of study because of an illness or medical condition, the designated school official must authorize the reduce course of study.[15][16] The student's illness or medical condition must be documented by a licensed Doctor of Medicine, licensed Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine, or licensed clinical psychologist.[15][16] A reduced course of study must not last for longer than five months during a course of study.[15]

A student in M-1 status is not allowed to change the subject of study.[17]

Transfers

A student in M-1 status is allowed to transfer to another school only within the first six months of study in M-1 status.[18] A transfer after more than six months of study in M-1 status may be allowed if the student is unable to remain at the original school because of reasons beyond the student's control.[19]

Change of status

Students in M-1 status may not change their status to F-1 status, and they may not change their status to any H status if the training received under M-1 status provided the qualifications for the temporary worker position sought.[20]

Annual limit

There is no maximum number of M-1 visas that may be issued each year.[21]

Statistics

M-1 visas issued by country[22]
Country Number Issued
Afghanistan1
Albania3
Algeria93
Andorra1
Angola11
Antigua and Barbuda7
Argentina55
Australia195
Austria58
Azerbaijan5
Bahamas, The58
Bahrain13
Bangladesh3
Barbados3
Belarus3
Belgium79
Belize7
Bhutan4
Bolivia13
Bosnia and Herzegovina1
Botswana2
Brazil229
Brunei1
Bulgaria6
Burma21
Cabo Verde4
Cambodia10
Cameroon9
Canada25
Chile30
Colombia233
Congo, Democratic Republic of the9
Congo, Republic of the1
Costa Rica19
Cote d'Ivoire1
Croatia3
Cyprus2
Czech Republic16
Denmark31
Dominica2
Dominican Republic12
Ecuador69
Egypt49
El Salvador4
Eritrea3
Estonia1
Ethiopia3
Fiji1
Finland21
France204
Georgia3
Germany416
Ghana10
Great Britain and Northern Ireland509
Greece15
Grenada3
Guatemala24
Guyana14
Haiti5
Honduras10
Hong Kong S.A.R.33
Hungary6
Iceland11
India489
Indonesia104
Iraq5
Ireland39
Israel46
Italy127
Jamaica27
Japan539
Jordan15
Kazakhstan26
Kenya25
Korea, South607
Kosovo2
Kuwait13
Laos1
Latvia3
Lebanon12
Liechtenstein1
Lithuania1
Luxembourg4
Macau S.A.R.2
Macedonia2
Madagascar2
Malawi1
Malaysia36
Maldives2
Malta3
Mauritius1
Mexico204
Moldova1
Monaco1
Mongolia3
Morocco6
Mozambique1
Namibia5
Nepal1000
Netherlands129
New Zealand32
Nicaragua1
Nigeria107
Norway64
Oman5
Pakistan20
Palestine2
Panama65
Papua New Guinea7
Paraguay5
Peru69
Philippines55
Poland27
Portugal31
Qatar6
Romania24
Russia47
Rwanda5
Saint Lucia2
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines4
Samoa1
Saudi Arabia427
Senegal1
Serbia4
Seychelles3
Sierra Leone1
Singapore46
Slovakia3
Slovenia4
South Africa87
Spain77
Sri Lanka38
Sudan6
Suriname6
Swaziland2
Sweden82
Switzerland130
Syria3
Taiwan317
Tanzania19
Thailand80
Trinidad and Tobago29
Tunisia3
Turkey106
Turkmenistan1
Uganda12
Ukraine25
United Arab Emirates14
Uruguay8
Uzbekistan1
Venezuela29
Vietnam123
Yemen6
Zambia4
Zimbabwe12
Worldwide Total7,473
M visas issued by fiscal year[23][lower-alpha 1]
Fiscal Year Number Issued
201311,819
201412,210
201511,462
201610,694
20179,982
  1. Includes M-1, M-2, and M-3 visas

References

  1. "You can work in US on a student visa". The Economic Times (Mumbai, India). June 21, 2004.
  2. Warrier, B.S. (August 10, 2009. "Plan ahead for moving to the U.S.". The Hindu (Chennai, India).
  3. Singh, Harsimran (May 26, 2005). "How can I get a US visa?" The Economic Times (Mumbai, India).
  4. Douthat, Bill (September 15, 2001). "Foreigners Often OK'd for School". The Palm Beach Post (Palm Beach, Florida). p. 14A.
  5. "A gift of wings". The Economic Times (Mumbai, India). July 31, 2006.
  6. "How do I get a student visa?" Balita USA (Glendale, California). June 11, 2007.
  7. "8 CFR 214.2(m)(5)". via Legal Information Institute, Cornell University Law School. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  8. "USCIS Releases Policy Memo on Accrual of Unlawful Presence for F, J, and < Nonimmigrants". Edgerton Immigration Law. May 21, 2018.
  9. "Policy Memorandum 602-1060: Accrual of Unlawful Presence and F, J, and M Nonimmigrants". U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. U.S. Department of Homeland Security. May 10, 2018.
  10. Reschke, Michael (May 26, 2018). "Stricter visa rules could bar international students from returning to US". Herald-Times (Bloomington, Indiana).
  11. Medina, Frank (July 12, 2010). "Alternative options to the DREAM Act". Chicago Examiner.
  12. "8 CFR 214.2(m)(10)". via Legal Information Institute, Cornell University Law School. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  13. "[https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/8/214.2 8 CFR 214.2(m)(3)}'. via Legal Information Institute, Cornell University Law School. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  14. Vakil, Arun C. (July 24, 2006). "A gift of wings". The Economic Times. (Mumbai, India).
  15. "8 CFR 214.2(m)(9)". via Legal Information Institute, Cornell University Law School. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  16. "Reduced Course Load". SEVIS Hub Homepage. United States Department of Homeland Security. March 13, 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  17. "You can work in US on a student visa". The Economic Times. (Mumbai, India). June 21, 2004.
  18. Bargerstock, Nick (May 12, 2012). "Immigration Basics: FAQ for Academic Advisors advising International Students". NAFSA: Association of International Educators. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  19. "8 CFR 214.2(m)(11)". via Legal Information Institute, Cornell University Law School. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  20. Nachman, David, Esq.; Phulwani, Michael, Esq. (December 28, 2012). "Changing From One Non-Immigrant Visa Status to Another". Desi Talk (New York, New York). p. 20.
  21. Shah, Sudhir (May 24, 2004). "Consular officers take independent decisions". The Economic Times (Mumbai, India).
  22. "FY 2017 Nonimmigrant Visas Issued". United States Department of State. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  23. "Table XVI(A) Classes of Nonimmigrants Issued Visas (Including Border Crossing Cards) Fiscal Years 2013-2017". United States Department of State. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
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