To give you a little background : I'm a 20-year-old international student, currently pursuing a bachelor's degree at a US university, and have been employed full-time at a mid-sized software company in Silicon Valley as a UI engineer/backend developer for a year through the CPT program -- a program which basically allows international students to work at a company outside of the university as long as the line of work matches the major.
After several months of working there, my company showed interest in giving me an H1-B visa, which basically got me really excited as I, to be blunt, enjoy the work a whole lot more than college. I thought I could bypass the whole educational process and join the workforce directly. Turned out, I was wrong. When the company went through the visa process, they figured it's not possible to give out H1-B visa to foreigners without bachelor's degree. [1] It's possible to substitute the degree with I think ~7 years of professional work, but I have nowhere near that experience.
So here I am, trying to finish school as fast as I can.
[1] They just figured this out as they never offered visa to a degree-less foreign employee before.
To give you a little background : I'm a 20-year-old international student, currently pursuing a bachelor's degree at a US university, and have been employed full-time at a mid-sized software company in Silicon Valley as a UI engineer/backend developer for a year through the CPT program -- a program which basically allows international students to work at a company outside of the university as long as the line of work matches the major.
After several months of working there, my company showed interest in giving me an H1-B visa, which basically got me really excited as I, to be blunt, enjoy the work a whole lot more than college. I thought I could bypass the whole educational process and join the workforce directly. Turned out, I was wrong. When the company went through the visa process, they figured it's not possible to give out H1-B visa to foreigners without bachelor's degree. [1] It's possible to substitute the degree with I think ~7 years of professional work, but I have nowhere near that experience.
So here I am, trying to finish school as fast as I can.
[1] They just figured this out as they never offered visa to a degree-less foreign employee before.