以下是引用JoyCat在2004-6-24 20:47:00的发言:
burgeon 的人?
vested interest!
没有谁可以称自己是权威.趁火打劫更不好.
不想多说了.
趁火打劫? interesting.
我在这里回答问题,我打劫谁了?你?
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Gloria Wang [mailtgloria29@burgeon.org]
> Sent: 07 June 2004 12:06
> T Iain Robertson
> Subject: Fw: Visa Problem
>
> did you receive this?
> Every single time the visa people try to make some reas##被过滤## up without
> investigating into their own messy system and bribery!
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Sue Piggott [mailtsmpiggott@BROOKES.AC.UK]
> > Sent: 03 June 2004 11:09
> > T BUILA@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> > Subject: Re: Visa Problem
> >
> >
> > We visited the visa office last week in Beijing and had a meeting with
the
> > British C##被过滤##ul, Sue Morrell. She reported that the visa rejection rate
> had
> > risen significantly this year. This was partly due to higher detection
of
> > fraudulent papers by the Risk Assessment Unit and partly due to the visa
> > officer
> > not being convinced the student intends to study in the UK. Much of the
> > rejection on financial grounds was due to insufficient evidence that the
> > student
> > could provide funding for fees and living expenses for the duration of
> their
> > course. The visa officers need to have the funds in the bank account of
> > those
> > paying the fees for at least 6 months and they also need to have
> information
> > on
> > where this funding has come from.
> >
> > To help bone fide students to gain visas, Sue Morrell said that any
> > supporting
> > information on the student which would support his case would help the
> visa
> > officer. Also if cohorts are coming from partnerships it is helpful if
> these
> > go
> > through as a group with supporting information about the nature of the
> link
> > provided by the University.
> >
> > Sue Morrell also showed us visa application figures for this year, which
> as
> > people have already noted, are significantly down on previous years. She
> > could
> > not give an explanation as to why this is (but put forward some
> suggesti##被过滤##)
> > but
> > apparently it is across the board with applicati##被过滤## for all embassies
> down.
> > She
> > thought that there might be a rush after the exam results as it is now
> known
> > that for genuine students who have all the right paperwork, the visa
> process
> > only takes days (and not weeks as it had previously). Many universities
> have
> > increased their entry requirements which also might be having a negative
> > effect.
> > The third possibility which she suspects is having the most impact, is
> that
> > returning students are not getting any employment benefit for studying
> > overseas,
> > that Chinese employers don't appear to value an overseas degree, and the
> > value
> > of an overseas qualification (with all the huge expense involved ) is
not
> > gaining the top jobs with the higher incomes which would warrant the
> > expense.
> > Many are also unemployed and all this is having quite a negative impact
on
> > studying overseas.
> >
> > The British Council are also aware of this problem and will be working
> with
> > alumni on improving the profile of returned graduates and the employment
> > possibilities as well as developing networking oppornuties for returned
> > graduates.
> >
> > Hope this is a helpful contribution.
> >
> > Sue
> >
> >
> > "OCONNOR D.L." wrote:
> >
> > > A number of you ha |