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Nigerian Students Who Are Now Americans, How Did You Do It? - Travel (3) - Nairaland

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Re: Nigerian Students Who Are Now Americans, How Did You Do It? by beautyuche: 11:42am On Jun 27, 2023
My cousin is a recipient of this. She went to the Philippine and wrote the NCLEX exam. Still don't know the full details but she and her family got their Green card on arrival.

Eaganguolly:
Don't know much about the US citizenship processes. I heard once Nurses pass the NCLEX exam, they will be issued green card with their family.
Re: Nigerian Students Who Are Now Americans, How Did You Do It? by Gerrard59(op): 9:52am On Jul 03, 2023
Based on this thread and with the chances of getting H1B (less than 20%), I dare say the majority of Nigerian students, especially those not pursuing PhD or Postdoc (very few since we don't target academia as a career as a result of the low salaries), either regularise their stay via marriage and/or being illegals in the long run. Marriage is pretty easy since there is an existing black population to immerse in than, say, Indians or Chinese who are more in number but don't have an ethnic population of 13% to marry from. I dare say if we were in the shoes of the Indians or Chinese as the highest in terms of international students, to regularise our stay no go hard as we will target African American females (more male Nigerian students are in the US than female). Someone stated on Twitter that black women in Atlanta are being "abused" in relationships because the dating scene is very competitive. More single black women than single black men. That is an existing market to tap in and collect Green Card. grin Way better than Canada when it comes to relationships if you ask me.

That said, with the low chances of getting H1B, I hope say una no dey use personal money to study arts, social science and humanities programs? huh

Jahlivesforever:
F-1 US VISA HOPEFULS:

ON SCHOOLING AND WORKING IN AMERICA
About schooling or living or working in America, I think a lot of people either live in bubbles or do not have quality information. So, I am going to do this once, and give as much information as I can, based off of my own limited experience and knowledge. Anyone with better information is free to complement or challenge what I say. “I know somebody who know somebody” is not information. That somebody you know might not be telling you the whole story.

1. To enter the US you need a visa, and there are different kinds – student visas (e.g. J-1 and F-1), fiancé visa (to come see your fiancé), spousal visa (for people who are married or coming to get married), H1-B visa (if a US employer employs you), etc.

2. As a student, whether on J-1 or F-1 you are only allowed to work 20 hours max a week, and usually on campus. Of course, there are students who exceed this work limit, usually working off-the-book, under-the-table jobs, which is illegal but not uncommon.

3. When you finish school as a student, if you are on an F-1 visa (usually for students who self-sponsor or are sponsored by the school through research assistantships, teaching assistantships, etc.) you are allowed to do a one-year OPT (optional practical training) – like an internship to practice what you learned in school. NOW LISTEN CAREFULLY. This OPT is usually ONE YEAR for F-1 students, but if you did a STEM course, your OPT can be up to THREE YEARS.

4. So, when you hear someone say they finished school and stayed back in the US, they are either doing their ONE YEAR or THREE YEARS OPT.

5. For students on J-1 (usually those sponsored by a government or some scholarship bodies like the World Bank, Fulbright, etc., which is my visa category), there is also the option of a ONE YEAR Academic Training (AT), which is the equivalent of the OPT that F-1 or self-sponsored students get. In many cases, J-1 visas have a condition for such students to go back to their countries immediately after their program, and for some countries, like Nigeria, stay back for two years, before they can come back to the US to work or live permanently. However, this does not mean you cannot visit or even study in the US during this period. In fact, you can get a new visa, say an F-1 for another program, however, that 2-year condition will still be waiting for you (legally speaking that is, though I hear people may be able to find a way around this, even though dem no dey talk the way clearly).
I hope you are still following me:

6. So, what happens after your ONE YEAR or THREE YEAR OPT? Some employer has to sponsor your visa (if I am not wrong, basically, get you a H1-B visa, which is a work visa) for you to stay back legally. And if this does not happen, what is your fate? See you, see your country. Again, legally. Please, I am not interested in what people do illegally to stay back in the US. So it is normal for people on OPT, who have not got sponsors yet, to be worried and in some cases desperate. Some people might decide to enroll in another program to remain in the US and delay doomsday. Note, you cannot get OPT twice for the same level of education. So if you get one for masters, you can only get another one after your PhD.

7. So, what are the options of staying back after school? Well, the straightforward one is getting an employer to sponsor your work visa (and this is not the easiest thing in the world). Outside this, a common one is marriage. People get married – real or fake, to stay back. “I know somebody, she just finished and she no come back”. Sister, your friend fit don marry tay tay, no tell you. I know people for my set wey as dem show from Africa within two semesters dem don marry before dem even focus on school. Fake marriage na money. I won’t go into the issues that are involved in that now. E no concern me. Real marriage, if una like una sef, then God bless una union.

8. Outside the easy-hanging fruit – marriage, loads of people stay back illegally. Their visas expire and they just stay back. What this means is that you are an illegal or undocumented (as Oyibo like to sugarcoat things) resident. This also means because you don’t have a work permit na only under-the-table, minimum wage kinda jobs you can be doing. Those jobs pay cash because the employer is also avoiding paying taxes to the government. Those jobs na sufferhead job of course, but if you convert your dollars to Naira, na big man you be. These are the kind of jobs that you apply in the morning and get before 12 o’clock o. Ehen.

9. Also, some undocumented people might be using a fake social security card or other people’s own to work. The thing with staying undocumented is that you cannot leave the US, because your visa is expired. As you leave like this, there is no way to come back in. Some of the people who stay abroad for donkey years and have not returned home may be illegal residents. “I know one man, since 20 years e never come back, even when im mama die, he no come.” That man fit dey undocumented and as he comot like this, gate don close.

I believe now you have a clearer picture.
So, if you are coming to school in the US and your goal is to remain back, here is a summary of things you need to know:

1. You most likely need to get an F-1 visa. If you come with J-1 like me, even if you decide to marry, you go still go do that your two years for Nigeria before you can come and live permanently with your wife here. If you don’t want to do that, you can switch to a visitor visa, but you cannot work with that kind of visa, unless you want to continue doing under-the-table for the rest of your life.

2. If you get an F-1, just know you have ONLY ONE YEAR after school, or THREE YEARS if your program is STEM. And in that time, if you don’t get an employer to sponsor you, (which is not impossible, but definitely not a MY CASE IS DIFFERENT matter), you will either go back or find one of the roundabout ways people use to stay back in America endlessly. There are pros and cons to roundabout ways as you should know by now.

3. Marriage is probably your surest bet – if you fall in love, whether willingly or by force, good for you, and if you want do arrangee marriage, still good for you.

IF I AM TO ADVISE PEOPLE LOOKING TO RELOCATE ABROAD THROUGH SCHOOLING…
Canada is definitely your best bet. Trust me, I honestly don’t get the hype about being in America.

Immigration in Canada is a way better package than it is in America – in fact, they cannot be compared. If you get a student permit for Canada, after school, you get the same number of years as the length of your course to stay back and find a job. So, if you do a one-year course, you get one year. In this time, you can file for permanent residency, and even if you don’t get it immediately, you can always extend your after-school stay until you get a permanent residency. So, for Canada, the hardest thing is getting a student permit, because immigration officials know that people just use school these days to come to Canada so they can stay back. A Canadian Study Permit is definitely more difficult to get than a US Student Visa, again, for obvious reasons. If you manage to get into school in Canada, if you want to stay back, this is almost a sure way to. In a few years you can get your permanent residency, and a few more years you can get your citizenship. As a permanent resident in Canada, your chances of getting jobs in the US are way higher, if na US dey hungry you last last.

And lastly, to find job after schooling in the US is not undoable, but in fact, like in many countries (as I suspect), it is not a walk in the park. Be prepared to do loads of applications (because there are thousands of people across all 50 states applying for those sweet jobs too). But if you want to finish school and work at McDonald’s feel free to relax. Nothing do you, your job sure.
Re: Nigerian Students Who Are Now Americans, How Did You Do It? by Raalsalghul: 3:35pm On Jul 03, 2023
Gerrard59:
Based on this thread and with the chances of getting H1B (less than 20%), I dare say the majority of Nigerian students, especially those not pursuing PhD or Postdoc (very few since we don't target academia as a career as a result of the low salaries), either regularise their stay via marriage and/or being illegals in the long run. Marriage is pretty easy since there is an existing black population to immerse in than, say, Indians or Chinese who are more in number but don't have an ethnic population of 13% to marry from. I dare say if we were in the shoes of the Indians or Chinese as the highest in terms of international students, to regularise our stay no go hard as we will target African American females (more male Nigerian students are in the US than female). Someone stated on Twitter that black women in Atlanta are being "abused" in relationships because the dating scene is very competitive. More single black women than single black men. That is an existing market to tap in and collect Green Card. grin Way better than Canada when it comes to relationships if you ask me.

That said, with the low chances of getting H1B, I hope say una no dey use personal money to study arts, social science and humanities programs? huh
Most people I know that relocated to the U.S.A used marriage whether real/arranged.
Re: Nigerian Students Who Are Now Americans, How Did You Do It? by Gerrard59(op): 5:14pm On Jul 03, 2023
Raalsalghul:
Most people I know that relocated to the U.S.A used marriage whether real/arranged.
They never admit these things. Our people and dishonesty. lipsrsealed
Re: Nigerian Students Who Are Now Americans, How Did You Do It? by Raalsalghul: 4:07pm On Jul 05, 2023
Gerrard59:
They never admit these things. Our people and dishonesty. lipsrsealed
Yep, a distant relative of mine who was at a director position at NPA japaed to the U.S using a visit visa with her four children.

Knew she wasn't coming back because she sold all her properties and resigned before leaving.

I was recently trying to find out from my mum how she regularized her stay.

Mum said she planned it through an arranged marriage with a guy though she's yet to get her green card because they were both giving different answers to the same questions separately at the embassy but that she has started working (Most likely a menial job).
Re: Nigerian Students Who Are Now Americans, How Did You Do It? by Anguldi(m): 1:19pm On Feb 06, 2024
Raalsalghul:
Yep, a distant relative of mine who was at a director position at NPA japaed to the U.S using a visit visa with her four children.

Knew she wasn't coming back because she sold all her properties and resigned before leaving.

I was recently trying to find out from my mum how she regularized her stay.

Mum said she planned it through an arranged marriage with a guy though she's yet to get her green card because they were both giving different answers to the same questions separately at the embassy but that she has started working (Most likely a menial job).
Wahala
Re: Nigerian Students Who Are Now Americans, How Did You Do It? by optimusprime2(m):
For me, asides many others, one of the biggest scams that ever existed when it comes to the US immigration system, is that H1b visa procedure. Simply avoid it at all costs as a freshly graduated student.

Majority of the Nigerians I know either EB1/EB2'd themselves due to their advanced research work and degrees; MBA's PhD's/post docs... or they married Americans.

But as for struggling for the H1b... fuhgeddabowrit, that path is broken. (Except you work for a non profit or the uni which will give you the uncapped H1b path, but is still broken regardless).

FYI many folk in the US are illegal, because they simply reached the end of the line & decided to just leave it up to fate... when someone is illegal in the US... that person will smell his own rectum.
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