Re: [Assam] some tricks in getting US H1B visas -NGO work etc

2006-02-01 Thread umesh sharma
Ram-da,Thanks for your support throughout.UmeshRam Sarangapani [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:I agree, keep going after your goals, and you will succeed, Umesh.If you recall I wrote to keep you in the net when many others were asking for booting you out.Hehe, thats a far cry from what Umesh is today. Now he is one of the editors of the ASA Newsletter. He has done written some good articles for the newsletter - specially the one about the manuscript.--Ram da  On 1/31/06, Dilip/Dil Deka [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
Umesh,  Many of us have gone through some of these experiences. I like the fact that you do not hesitate to document them.  I didn't think you would make it to the states, you did. I didn't think you'd survive the cultural shock, you did. I didn't think you'd remain in the US after completing your studies, you did. Keep at it, you'll succeed in getting a work permit and a green card if that is your goal. We didn't go through some of the struggles you are going through. So it is hard to empathize with you all the time. But I wish you success because of your perseverance.   If you recall I wrote to keep you in the net when many others were asking for booting you out.I do not agree with many of your views but I know it takes all kinds to make this human race. Keep writing though I delete many of
 your postings.  Dilipda   umesh sharma [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:  http://in.rediff.com/getahead/2005/sep/14visa.htm  Convert your F-1 student visa to H-IB work visaHi,US non-profits are rabidly afraid of seeking to hire foreign staff to work in Dc etc - esp after getting rebuffed many a times from US immigrant services INS - even when they seek intra-company
 transfers of their employees from over-sees offices. More so , after Sep 11. Maybe becos one of the examples given to me ws of a certain Mr Muhammad from Middle East/ Africa ( I don't remember clearly). So I am trying to identify a different route. It seems that also is a road well travelled. NOTE: For those in a hurry: just go to the bottom of the page - for tips and tricksWell, after I got the eye flu last week (eyelids got swollen 3 times their normal size - just minutes after I "seeing off" my NRI landlord fly out of Reagan Intl. Airport, across the river fromDC to Cochin, India on Kuwait Airlines ) - I devoted my time to using my other senses - mainly listening to Beatles and others on FM channel and racking my brains. Just a day before I had borrowed Rs 30,000 ($650 ) from my borther in India to meet the fund flow bottleneck while paying my student loan ($350 pm for 15
 years)and rent ($400pm).  Economics - means optimal utilization of ALL resources. I try to be a good economist - for my own good as well.I had been sincerely applying to jobs in non profits across the world - mainly East of US- to all posiitions -even Country Head ones-wherever French was not a requirement. US non-profit experience:  Incidently, today I completed my one complete month of teaching 8 yearolds in US - from immigrant families - mostly Latinos and one Black. Most are from either poor or disrupted families.Atleast one has a behavior disorder,one's father is in jail for "hitting a girl - my mother" -as the boy said, one girl's mother needs an English-Spanish translater, another's US raised father is barely able to sign his name.Another breaks into tears in class becos he misses his father (Boys don't cry) who stays
 near his home but met him only on weekends (maybe family separated). I can say that I have met a group of students who represent "disadvantaged" term in thelexicon of US colleges of education. This gives me confidence. Ofcourse the Harvard tag adds to the work I do - it seems colleagues do give weight to that as well. Salary  Experience for expat jobs: Complex situationI was wondering why not also try to work in US with some non-profit - and maybe take short trips when needed to developing countries. Unlike those who have not grown up in poor countires I do not need to get acclimatized to their environment to do policy or strategey related work. Further, only very senior positions are available in developing nations -which pay in dollars (even though even Country Heads of these Intl. NGOs draw pay less than that of a District School Superintendent in US) .
 The local citizen - field officers (FO) in some NGOs ( I saw their pay in www.devnetjobs.org ) in India pays less that what is designated in UN's goal - $2 per person per day(FO's pay = Rs5,000 pm or $120 pm or $4 per day - which feeds a family of four assuming) . Even if you discount the fact that costs are very low in field positions - I assume salaries would be higher in US for lower level positions - which most likely would be numerous. No wonder on the evening of graduation ceremony at Harvard while we were returning our capes and hoods and gowns at Harvard Coop. - one classmate from Silicon Valley area said that she is going 

Re: [Assam] some tricks in getting US H1B visas -NGO work etc

2006-01-31 Thread Dilip/Dil Deka
Umesh,  Many of us have gone through some of these experiences. I like the fact that you do not hesitate to document them.  I didn't think you would make it to the states, you did. I didn't think you'd survive the cultural shock, you did. I didn't think you'd remain in the US after completing your studies, you did. Keep at it, you'll succeed in getting a work permit and a green card if that is your goal. We didn't go through some of the struggles you are going through. So it is hard to empathize with you all the time. But I wish you success because of your perseverance.  If you recall I wrote to keep you in the net when many others were asking for booting you out.I do not agree with many of your views but I know it takes all kinds to make this human race. Keep writing though I delete many of your postings.  Dilipdaumesh sharma [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 
   http://in.rediff.com/getahead/2005/sep/14visa.htm  Convert your F-1 student visa to H-IB work visaHi,US non-profits are rabidly afraid of seeking to hire foreign staff to work in Dc etc - esp after getting rebuffed many a times from US immigrant services INS - even when they seek intra-company transfers of their employees from over-sees offices. More so , after Sep 11. Maybe becos one of the examples given to me ws of a certain Mr Muhammad from Middle East/ Africa ( I don't remember clearly). So I am trying to identify a different route. It seems that also is a road well travelled.   
  NOTE: For those in a hurry: just go to the bottom of the page - for tips and tricksWell, after I got the eye flu last week (eyelids got swollen 3 times their normal size - just minutes after I "seeing off" my NRI landlord fly out of Reagan Intl. Airport, across the river fromDC to Cochin, India on Kuwait Airlines ) - I devoted my time to using my other senses - mainly listening to Beatles and others on FM channel and racking my brains. Just a day before I had borrowed Rs 30,000 ($650 ) from my borther in India to meet the fund flow bottleneck while paying my student loan ($350 pm for 15 years)and rent ($400pm). Economics - means optimal utilization of ALL resources. I try to be a good economist - for my own good as well.I had been sincerely applying to jobs in non profits across the world - mainly East of US- to all posiitions
 -even Country Head ones-wherever French was not a requirement. US non-profit experience:  Incidently, today I completed my one complete month of teaching 8 yearolds in US - from immigrant families - mostly Latinos and one Black. Most are from either poor or disrupted families.Atleast one has a behavior disorder,one's father is in jail for "hitting a girl - my mother" -as the boy said, one girl's mother needs an English-Spanish translater, another's US raised father is barely able to sign his name.Another breaks into tears in class becos he misses his father (Boys don't cry) who stays near his home but met him only on weekends (maybe family separated). I can say that I have met a group of students who represent "disadvantaged" term in thelexicon of US colleges of education. This gives me confidence. Ofcourse the Harvard tag adds to the work I do - it seems colleagues do give weight to that as
 well.Salary  Experience for expat jobs: Complex situationI was wondering why not also try to work in US with some non-profit - and maybe take short trips when needed to developing countries. Unlike those who have not grown up in poor countires I do not need to get acclimatized to their environment to do policy or strategey related work. Further, only very senior positions are available in developing nations -which pay in dollars (even though even Country Heads of these Intl. NGOs draw pay less than that of a District School Superintendent in US) . The local citizen - field officers (FO) in some NGOs ( I saw their pay in www.devnetjobs.org ) in India pays less that what is designated in UN's goal - $2 per person per day(FO's pay = Rs5,000 pm or $120 pm or $4 per day - which feeds a family of four assuming)
 . Even if you discount the fact that costs are very low in field positions - I assume salaries would be higher in US for lower level positions - which most likely would be numerous. No wonder on the evening of graduation ceremony at Harvard while we were returning our capes and hoods and gowns at Harvard Coop. - one classmate from Silicon Valley area said that she is going back home and work as a school teacher in a local school - to get rich , build her home and raise children. And not seek jobs in development with non profits working in poor countries. US view of NGO posts in poor countries:   She said that she had worked enough in development (she did a lot in Africa before the program ) -and perhaps becos she had recently got engaged to her boy friend doing his doctoral in a technical field at Stanford. Maybe she needed a Harvard tag to match his Stanford tech degree. This reasoning would gel with the 

Re: [Assam] some tricks in getting US H1B visas -NGO work etc

2006-01-31 Thread umesh sharma
Dilip-da,Thank you for your support. Esp about the booting out incident. I like being on AssamNet.UmeshDilip/Dil Deka [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:Umesh,  Many of us have gone through some of these experiences. I like the fact that you do not hesitate to document them.  I didn't think you would make it to the states, you did. I didn't think you'd survive the cultural shock, you did. I didn't think you'd remain in the US after completing your studies, you did. Keep at it, you'll succeed in getting a work permit and a green card if that is your goal. We didn't go through some of the struggles you are going through. So it is hard to empathize with you all the time. But I wish you success because of your perseverance.  If you recall I wrote
 to keep you in the net when many others were asking for booting you out.I do not agree with many of your views but I know it takes all kinds to make this human race. Keep writing though I delete many of your postings.  Dilipdaumesh sharma [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:http://in.rediff.com/getahead/2005/sep/14visa.htm  Convert your F-1 student visa to H-IB work visaHi,US non-profits are rabidly afraid of seeking to hire foreign staff to work in Dc etc - esp after getting rebuffed many a times from US immigrant services INS - even
 when they seek intra-company transfers of their employees from over-sees offices. More so , after Sep 11. Maybe becos one of the examples given to me ws of a certain Mr Muhammad from Middle East/ Africa ( I don't remember clearly). So I am trying to identify a different route. It seems that also is a road well travelled. NOTE: For those in a hurry: just go to the bottom of the page - for tips and tricksWell, after I got the eye flu last week (eyelids got swollen 3 times their normal size - just minutes after I "seeing off" my NRI landlord fly out of Reagan Intl. Airport, across the river fromDC to Cochin, India on Kuwait Airlines ) - I devoted my time to using my other senses - mainly listening to Beatles and others on FM channel and racking my brains. Just a day before I had borrowed Rs 30,000 ($650 ) from my borther in India to meet the fund flow bottleneck while paying my student
 loan ($350 pm for 15 years)and rent ($400pm). Economics - means optimal utilization of ALL resources. I try to be a good economist - for my own good as well.I had been sincerely applying to jobs in non profits across the world - mainly East of US- to all posiitions -even Country Head ones-wherever French was not a requirement. US non-profit experience:  Incidently, today I completed my one complete month of teaching 8 yearolds in US - from immigrant families - mostly Latinos and one Black. Most are from either poor or disrupted families.Atleast one has a behavior disorder,one's father is in jail for "hitting a girl - my mother" -as the boy said, one girl's mother needs an English-Spanish translater, another's US raised father is barely able to sign his name.Another breaks into tears in class becos he misses his father (Boys
 don't cry) who stays near his home but met him only on weekends (maybe family separated). I can say that I have met a group of students who represent "disadvantaged" term in thelexicon of US colleges of education. This gives me confidence. Ofcourse the Harvard tag adds to the work I do - it seems colleagues do give weight to that as well.Salary  Experience for expat jobs: Complex situationI was wondering why not also try to work in US with some non-profit - and maybe take short trips when needed to developing countries. Unlike those who have not grown up in poor countires I do not need to get acclimatized to their environment to do policy or strategey related work. Further, only very senior positions are available in developing nations -which pay in dollars (even though even Country Heads of these Intl. NGOs draw pay less than that of a District School
 Superintendent in US) . The local citizen - field officers (FO) in some NGOs ( I saw their pay in www.devnetjobs.org ) in India pays less that what is designated in UN's goal - $2 per person per day(FO's pay = Rs5,000 pm or $120 pm or $4 per day - which feeds a family of four assuming) . Even if you discount the fact that costs are very low in field positions - I assume salaries would be higher in US for lower level positions - which most likely would be numerous. No wonder on the evening of graduation ceremony at Harvard while we were returning our capes and hoods and gowns at Harvard Coop. - one classmate from Silicon Valley area said that she is going back home and work as a school teacher in a local school - to get rich , build her home and raise children. And not seek jobs in development with non profits working in poor countries. US view of NGO posts in poor countries:
   She said that she had worked enough in development (she did a lot in Africa before the program ) -and perhaps becos she had recently got engaged to her boy friend