| Tougher
new rules for foreign students
( 10 February 2010)
Foreign
students from outside Europe wanting to come to
the UK to study will be required to meet stricter
entry criteria, the Home Secretary, Alan Johnson
announced today. The new regulations will ensure
that students studying below degree level have
a limited ability to work in the UK and that their
dependants cannot work here at all. It will be
even harder for bogus students, whose only aim
is to work in the UK, to come into the country.
The Home Secretary also confirmed today, that
the Government will implement plans to introduce
a points test by 2011 for those who wish to earn
British Citizenship.
New measures, announced today,
include:
* a good standard of English (equivalent
of holding just below a GCSE in a foreign
language) will be needed to come to the UK
and study to improve English language competency
further;
* a good standard of
English (again equivalent of holding just
below a GCSE in a foreign language) will need
to be demonstrated in order to study any other
course below degree level;
* restricting the lowest
level courses (A-levels and equivalent) to
only the most trusted institutions;
* halving the amount
of time a student studying below first degree
level or on a foundation degree course, will
be able to work, to just ten hours during
term time;
* a ban on bringing in
dependants for anyone studying a course for
less than six months; and
* a ban on dependants
of anyone studying a course lower than foundation
or undergraduate degree level from working
- they will face removal from the UK if found
doing so.
Students already have to
prove that they have; been sponsored by an educational
establishment that holds a tier 4 Sponsor Licence,
the required level of maintenance with which to
support themselves in the UK - £800 (London)
/ £600 (outside London) per month up to
a maximum of 9 months, a good immigration history
and that their presence in the UK would not be
harmful.
Home Secretary Alan Johnson
said:"The Points Based System was introduced
to provide a rigorous system to manage legitimate
access to the UK to work and study, with the ability
to respond to changing circumstances.
"We want foreign students
to come here to study, not to work illegally,
and today we have set out necessary steps which
will maintain the robustness of the system we
introduced last year. I make no apologies for
that."
In addition, the new measures
will include:
* a ban on foreign students studying below
degree level if the course includes a work
placement - unless that course is being provided
by a university, college or training provider
which has the status of "highly trusted
sponsor";
* a requirement for students
to demonstrate their English language ability
by passing an approved secure test - this
will apply to all students studying below
(foundation) degree level, including those
coming to study English language; and
* introduction of tougher
criteria for defining which course providers
count as "highly trusted sponsors"
of foreign students. We expect that all publicly
funded universities and colleges will count
as highly trusted, and we will ensure that
there is a rapid but rigorous system for ensuring
that private training colleges can also gain
that status as soon as possible.
UK universities and colleges
offer an excellent education and the government
recognises the essential contribution genuine
international students bring - economically, academically
and socially - to the country as a whole, as well
as to the universities and colleges in which they
study. However these steps are part of the government's
commitment to crack down on potential abuse of
the system.
These changes are part of
a radical overhaul of the student system that
began last year. Since March 2009, the government
has required all foreign students to be sponsored
by a UKBA licensed college and to demonstrate
they can support themselves once they get here
before being granted a visa. Also since March,
any college or university wanting to bring in
international students must be accredited and
licensed. This has reduced the number of institutions
able to bring students to the UK from over 4,000
to approximately 2,000.
Pat McFadden Minister for
Business, Innovation and Skills said: "Genuine
international students are welcome in the UK.
They make a significant contribution to the academic
and cultural life of the universities and colleges
where they study and bring over £5.3bn to
our economy each year. But where there is abuse
it undermines the position of genuine students
as much as anyone else.
"It is important that
we protect the reputation and quality of our institutions
by ensuring only legitimate students are able
to benefit from the courses they offer. This is
why we will work closely with the sector to implement
the recommendations of this review."
The new requirements for
foreign students follow a review of Tier 4 of
the PBS, announced by the Prime Minister in November
2009. The review team were asked to look at whether
the current Tier 4 arrangements strike the right
balance between facilitating access of genuine
students and preventing abuse by economic migrants.
The decision to introduce
a points test for citizenship follows the results
of a public consultation on the proposals which
were published today. The results show that three
quarters of the public polled during the consultation
are in favour of the Government's plans to introduce
a points scheme for citizenship.
Alan Johnson added:"We
have already made fundamental changes to the immigration
system to control migration in a way that is firm,
and has a positive impact on our work force and
economy.
"From 2011 we will put
the mechanisms in place that will ensure that
people who are allowed to become citizens have
earned their right to stay here.
"We will do this using
a points test, giving us the ability to take clear,
enforceable decisions about who should be allowed
to stay permanently, with the flexibility to raise
or lower the threshold for citizenship, depending
on the current interests of the country and economy."
Under the new rules anyone
wishing to become a permanent resident will have
to earn their right to citizenship. This will
restrict the number of economic migrants granted
citizenship, for example by limiting it only to
those who have the qualifications or skills that
the economy needs, or are living in parts of the
country where there are specific skills shortages
that they can fill. They will also have to demonstrate
that they could speak good English for their application
to be successful.
Top |