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INTEL INSIDE: Pearson and colleagues
closed the I-Center twice a week to key in student
data.
Rod Searcey |
shortly before the start of fall quarter
last year, some 40 international students still had not
received visas—and were stranded at home, waiting to
come to Stanford. Fast-forward a year: this September,
the number
of visa delays was hovering at about five.
Not that getting
there was easy. Like all postsecondary schools nationwide,
Stanford had to cope with the requirements
of a new and often frustrating federal computerized system
for keeping tabs on international students. Starting
in May, Bechtel International Center director John Pearson
and his
staff closed the center two days each week so they could
enter student data—country of citizenship, local address,
academic major, dependents, expected end date of program,
among others—in
the web-based Student and Exchange Visitor Information
System (SEVIS).
The staffers met the August 1 filing deadline
for all but
a dozen of the University’s 2,900 continuing international
students. And those 12, Pearson says, could have been working
anywhere in the United States, perhaps on authorization
other than a student visa, or they may have left the country. “This
is a new [requirement]—that we are now responsible for
knowing where they are and updating addresses,” he adds.
Ever
since it was revealed that some of the September 11 hijackers
had entered the United States on student visas,
tracking international students has become a federal
priority. More
students are undergoing background checks, men from 20
mostly Muslim countries are being fingerprinted and photographed,
and Pearson now carries a cell phone to take calls from
officials
at ports of entry.
With more than a million international
students in the SEVIS system, Pearson says things went
more smoothly than
expected. “There
were times up until August 1 where it was bewilderingly
slow, and it did log people out a lot,” he notes. “Students’ records
were known to disappear, and you might suddenly get students
on your list who were from another school.”
Having cleared
the initial SEVIS hurdle, Pearson remains concerned about
the visa delays and denials that international
students face. “It’s really about people’s
lives,” he says. “When you go overseas for a
conference for three days, and suddenly it’s six months
before you can get back [to the United States], that’s
tough.”
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