Interesting People mailing list archives

Visa policy hinders research from Dallas Morning News


From: Dave Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2002 13:18:48 -0500


------ Forwarded Message
From: brent.hunsaker () earthlink net
Reply-To: brent.hunsaker () earthlink net
Date: Mon, 25 Nov 2002 10:12:47 -0800
To: dave () farber net
Subject: Re: <[IP]> Visa policy hinders research from Dallas Morning News

Wow, 
I do not agree with you Dave. I have my physics degree and it was NASA in
the
1960s that caught my imagination to go for the sciences. The flight of the
Mercury space flights and on through Apollo 11 is what excited me. It was
also
the Science Fiction writers of Asmov and Clark that fired my mind as to the
possibilities. 

What is pushing me out of the engineering field is the extended unemployment
of one to two years every decade or so. I was working in the defense
industry
in the early 1990s when Bush Sr. promissed we would not be cut. Then he cut
the defense spending sending hundreds of thousands of engineers and
scientists
into the streets. I was out of work for over 2 years. I had just recovered
from the financial loss caused ten years ago.

I just lost my job in the telecomm depression. I am tired of being treated
like an asset that can be baught and then discarded.

IEEE just finished an unemployment study showing that the average time an
engineer is unemployed is 48 to 51 weeks at my experence level. That demands
a
huge cash reserve to be maintained just for these times. There goes
retirement.

I am looking to move into law which seems much stabler. A patent lawyer also
make good money and I can do law well past the retirement age in the
electronic industry.

So now you also have a high attrition rate in the field.

I also know many who are in the electronic industry are telling their kids
not
to go there because of being treated poorly.

Even the best and brightest in the industry, like you Dave, are not free of
these problem.

With some many kids from these families coming into the universities now it
is
no wonder so few are stayin away from the hard sciences.

Brent Hunsaker

On Sun, 24 Nov 2002 09:19:13 -0500 Dave Farber <dave () farber net> wrote:

I found the following quote to be disturbing.

"American students tend not to go into the hard
sciences," he said. "They
like law, medicine, business and things like
that. In these kind of
industries, we've been dependent on foreign
students for our best
scientists." 

Sounds to me like we need to stimulate our
primary secondary schools to make
science more exciting and also to change the
image of science as a place for
"nerds". But that has been true for years!!

We may well be on our way to becoming a second
rate nation with respect to
technology.

Dave


Visa policy hinders research

11/24/2002 

By LINDA K. WERTHEIMER / The Dallas Morning
News

America's move to shut the spigot on student
visas after 9-11 has created a
brain drain for universities that rely on top
foreign students to help with
scientific research.

Professors, graduate school deans and officials
from national science
societies say hundreds of foreign students
recruited to work on projects in
such areas as physics, math and petroleum
engineering were kept out this
fall because they couldn't get visas.

Some gave up and went to other countries
instead.

"Basically, some research projects are dying,"
said George McMechan, a
scientist at the University of Texas at Dallas
who is missing eight Chinese
researchers this fall ­ a third of doctoral
students he admitted. "There
aren't enough people to work on them."
 
Fred Olness, physics department chairman at
SMU, said most of the program's
graduate students are from other countries.
(KIM RITZENTHALER / DMN)

There is no national count of how many students
are missing from graduate
schools, but recent surveys of universities
indicate few are exempt. In
Texas, Rice University, Southern Methodist
University, Texas A&M University
and the University of Texas are among those
feeling the effects.

University and science academy officials, who
acknowledge the need for
tightened national security, are pleading with
the State Department to come
up with a speedier way to screen visa
applicants.

"There has to be a balance between openness in
the global scientific
enterprise and protecting ourselves," said
Jordan Konisky, Rice University's
vice provost for research and graduate studies.

Dr. Konisky, a microbiologist, said he
understands the government's concerns
about stopping students from taking sensitive
research information back to
certain countries.

"We have to worry about this technology that's
just flowing back and forth
across international borders. This threat, no
one likes it," he said. "But
we have to have some kind of reasonable
response."

A State Department spokesman said the denial
rate for visas has gone up for
all categories, not just for students. During
the 12 months ending Sept. 30,
27 percent of applicants were denied, up from
23 percent in the previous
year, said Stuart Patt, spokesman for the U.S.
Bureau of Consular Affairs.

"We've heard about the concerns from the
scientific community, and we are
looking at how we can accomplish our national
security responsibilities, and
at the same time, improve the visa process so
there won't be undue delays,"
Mr. Patt said. 

Stuck in limbo 


THE EFFECTS OF BLOCKING STUDENTS
Some examples of how visa problems have
affected universities:
€ The number of foreign scholars fell by 8
percent from fall 2001 to fall
2002, according to a survey of 77 universities
by the Association of
International Educators.
€ Physics programs lost 21 percent of foreign
students they admitted,
according to 79 universities that responded to
a survey by the American
Physical Society.
€ A consortium of five universities, including
the University of Texas and
Texas A&M University, lost about 70 Iranian
students who were participating
in an energy exploration partnership with an
Iranian oil company.
€ Texas A&M lost 22 of 66 petroleum engineering
students admitted this year.
€ Research meetings have suffered because
international scientists cannot
get visitor visas.
€ Texas Christian University's international
student enrollment fell by 40
students. Most of the affected students were
from China, India and the
Middle East.
€ A Chinese student returned to his country to
get married this summer. He
still is trying to return to his classes at
Rice University.
SOURCES: American Physical Society; Association
of International Educators;
Dallas Morning News research The affected
students ­ mostly from China,
Russia and the Middle East ­ were denied
admittance to the United States or
were stuck in the approval process when the
fall semester began. Many remain
in limbo. 

Since the Sept. 11 attacks, all applicants from
seven countries identified
as state sponsors of terrorism have had to go
through extra screening. Some
applicants from 26 other nations also get
additional scrutiny, Mr. Patt
said. The visa process that once took two or
three weeks now takes three to
five months. 

The American Physical Society, a national group
based in College Park, Md.,
, surveyed 185 advanced-degree physics programs
recently. The 79
universities that responded said 123 of 595
foreign students admitted for
this fall had been denied visas.

That's just a percentage of all students kept
out this fall.

A consortium of five universities ­ UT, Texas
A&M, the University of Kansas,
the University of Tulsa and Colorado School of
Mines ­ say they lost about
70 Iranian students who were to have come to
the United States in a
partnership with an Iranian oil company. UT
lost all 11 recruits, and Texas
A&M lost 11 of 14.

Some of UT's recruits told the university by
e-mail that they would instead
attend schools in Norway, England and France,
said Kamy Sepehrnoori, a UT
professor and graduate adviser in petroleum
engineering.

Thomas Blasingame, the assistant head of
graduate studies at Texas A&M's
petroleum engineering department, said the
students would have helped U.S.
and Iranian efforts to extract oil and gas.

In all, Texas A&M lost 22 of 66 petroleum
engineering students admitted this
year because of visa issues, he said.

Dr. McMechan, director for the Center for
Lithospheric Studies at UTD, said
his missing Chinese researchers would have
helped in the search for new oil
reserves. The center also hunts for oil that
was missed in existing fields.

Losing even a few international students can
damage a program, said Fred
Olness, chairman of the physics department at
Southern Methodist University.

"This year, we got no foreign students," Dr.
Olness said. "One or two more
years of this could virtually devastate the
program."

SMU physicists are doing research in
high-energy physics, including
development of high-speed computer modems for
the future. The department
usually has 10 graduate students, most from
abroad because that's where SMU
finds top physics students, he said. This year,
it has just six.

"I feel like we're losing because we're missing
the chance to train future
scientific leaders," Dr. Olness said.

Chinese concerns 


SMU is still trying to get 24-year-old Zhiling
Chen of Beijing. Mr. Chen,
who has missed the fall semester because of
visa problems, works in
high-energy physics, SMU's focus. Reached via
e-mail, Mr. Chen said he began
applying for his visa in June. He has gone
through three interviews and is
awaiting a fourth in December.

"I am very disappointed and frustrated," said
Mr. Chen, whose father earned
a doctorate in physics from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. "I
really do not understand what the policy is for
the student visa application
at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. It breaks the
dreams of many Chinese
students about the democratic system in the
U.S."

Mr. Patt said the State Department pays special
attention to Chinese
applications because of concerns about the
transfer of technology.

The Sept. 11 attacks highlighted longtime
problems monitoring students from
abroad. Several hijackers got into the United
States to attend flight
school. Others were approved for student visas.

Dr. Konisky, the Rice researcher, said the
government had little choice but
to crack down. 

"We all found ourselves in an impossible
situation," he said. "The system
was so broken in terms of tracking. These
students would come, they wouldn't
show up at school. Nobody knew where they were.
Their visas had expired. The
State Department and the INS  had to
take serious steps quickly, and they did."

Still, university officials say, they need
international students, who staff
research labs, work as teaching assistants in
undergraduate classes and act
as collaborators on research before and after
they finish their degrees.

They are recommending solutions to the
government, including giving more
resources to federal agencies that screen visa
applicants.

Irving Lerch, director of international affairs
of the physics society, said
the nation should work to protect the
investments it has made in the
sciences. The National Science Foundation gave
$3.6 billion this year to
universities for scientific research.

"The United States sees fit to make a huge
investment in these
laboratories," Dr. Lerch said. "The success of
the labs is tremendously
dependent on foreign investment and
collaboration.

"We have to have some kind of security. Nobody
is suggesting to throw open
the borders to anybody who wants to come."

The government also needs to give consular
offices better instructions on
who can be admitted and what areas of science
are of particular concern,
said Victor Johnson, an associate executive
director at the Association of
International Educators in Washington, D.C.

"Because the government has not yet defined the
criteria to describe what
they're worried about, they're tending to cast
a very wide net," Dr. Johnson
said. 

"Anybody can get caught up in this, from a guy
majoring in chemistry at UT
to a world-renowned researcher who wants to
come to Cal Tech or MIT to
participate in the frontiers of research in
physics."

Dearth of U.S. scholars


Some educators say the situation highlights
another large problem that
exists within the nation's borders: the dearth
of American students
qualified to fill research posts.

"Someday that faucet will be turned off for our
colleges and universities to
bring in international students. Maybe it's
just beginning," said Manuel
Berriozabal, a University of Texas at San
Antonio professor who founded an
engineering program for middle and high school
students.

"They're going to be sorry that there was not
more attention paid to our own
students and growing our own talent."

Researchers said they have tried to recruit
American students with little
success. 

At UTD, Dr. McMechan said scholarships for
American students go unused.

"American students tend not to go into the hard
sciences," he said. "They
like law, medicine, business and things like
that. In these kind of
industries, we've been dependent on foreign
students for our best
scientists." 

E-mail lwertheimer () dallasnews com


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