Hello All. I went through OR, but am kicking myself for not doing EA. When I applied, three different attys told me that I was a shoo-in for OR, but shouldnt risk EA. They said a) having an employer makes it easier b)EA is slightly(only slightly) tougher c) my credentials being non-mainstream, wanted to minimize INS giving me an RFE-- they were looking for "easy way out" strategy (I interpret it as not wanting to work particularly hard on my particular case). I heard roughly the same thing from all three people I consulted. EA doubtful, OR 90%. Didnt want the big bad employer in the pic of course. The most senior (30 yrs exp), and cleverest atty I asked said this is the pecking order of difficulty: NIW<Schedule A(Exceptional ability)<OR<EA. (the first two being roughly equal and the second two being roughly equal)
I did get my OR with no RFE. But, I also hear that fresh PhDs with just gradschool experience behind them are getting EAs approved(!). And fresh PhDs at places such as Intel are getting ORs approved (double !). Both these facts seem to belie the very criteria INS has laid out for these "top of the field" and "international reputation" respectively. I also know that a lot of attorneys systematically ask starting Asst Profs to do NIW or EB-2s-- which seems reasonable. However the abovementioned approvals make it seem that these attys are choosing the path of least resistance, and in reality holding us back. A starting Asst Prof at an ivy league school is usually more qualified than an Intel fresh PhD. A good friend of mine, an asst prof is being asked to do NIW, not even OR. I suggest EA to him. Wondering where the truth lies on OR vs EA. A research article by Miller-Mayer says that OR is tougher to satisfy procedurally, since INS applies a more literal "international" definition, than accepting a number of equivalents as for the EA, but it doesnt say which applicant must have more "research or technical" credentials. What do y'all think? Please answer the poll.
I hate the fact that I trusted my atty, and have to hang around my employer smiling for some more time, than just disappear!
My specific credentials: a major international prize, several articles about me in international newspapers, national TV channels, and cover stories about my work in trade magazines (nothing in proper academic journals- I am not an academic researcher), several original contributions to the field attested by stellar referees from all over the world like Fellow of ACM, Turing winners major industry figures etc., 9 papers (don't have need/time to write, not in academics- I offer consulting services rather.). But, I really think that those fresh PhDs I mention above, can't hold a candle to me. I'll stake my Porsche on that.
Please tell me what y'all think. (reporsting since the poll occludes my actual post...)
I did get my OR with no RFE. But, I also hear that fresh PhDs with just gradschool experience behind them are getting EAs approved(!). And fresh PhDs at places such as Intel are getting ORs approved (double !). Both these facts seem to belie the very criteria INS has laid out for these "top of the field" and "international reputation" respectively. I also know that a lot of attorneys systematically ask starting Asst Profs to do NIW or EB-2s-- which seems reasonable. However the abovementioned approvals make it seem that these attys are choosing the path of least resistance, and in reality holding us back. A starting Asst Prof at an ivy league school is usually more qualified than an Intel fresh PhD. A good friend of mine, an asst prof is being asked to do NIW, not even OR. I suggest EA to him. Wondering where the truth lies on OR vs EA. A research article by Miller-Mayer says that OR is tougher to satisfy procedurally, since INS applies a more literal "international" definition, than accepting a number of equivalents as for the EA, but it doesnt say which applicant must have more "research or technical" credentials. What do y'all think? Please answer the poll.
I hate the fact that I trusted my atty, and have to hang around my employer smiling for some more time, than just disappear!
My specific credentials: a major international prize, several articles about me in international newspapers, national TV channels, and cover stories about my work in trade magazines (nothing in proper academic journals- I am not an academic researcher), several original contributions to the field attested by stellar referees from all over the world like Fellow of ACM, Turing winners major industry figures etc., 9 papers (don't have need/time to write, not in academics- I offer consulting services rather.). But, I really think that those fresh PhDs I mention above, can't hold a candle to me. I'll stake my Porsche on that.
Please tell me what y'all think. (reporsting since the poll occludes my actual post...)