 Excellent advice. It looks like some of our online participants are asking about working while they're in school to help pay for their studies. Is it possible to work? Right. Well, according to current visa regulations, if a student is on a student visa, they can work up to 20 hours a week on campus with permission from immigration, and there is an office on everyone's campus called the International Student and Scholar Services. So they deal with immigration regulations, they also work with programming and adapting to transitioning to a U.S. university campus. But the law does allow for up to 20 hours of work on a campus. Personally speaking, from the students who have worked in my office over the last eight years, I've had a variety of students. No one student could even give me more than 14 hours a week because of the academic obligations. The first job a student has is to be a student. So getting a little job on campus legally it's allowed, you've got to have really good time management skills, and it's good pocket money. It will not finance your education, but you can do so. Now over the summers, a student can request permission to work off campus up to 40 hours a week on a student visa during the summer period, and summer in the United States is from mid-May till about mid or end of August. So that could be a nice period of time if the student gets the job that has been allowed him or her to do. When a student finishes their education under the current laws, if they're on a student F1 visa, they can stay in the United States for a year and do an OPT, an optional practical training program as long as they are employed within a certain number of weeks after graduation and in a field that is related to the degree they studied, and that they have an employer who is going to hire them. But that would be work with a salary for a year to get that experience, and after completion of every degree they can get that one year of experience after a BA or an MA or a PhD. These are not going to fund the whole budget, but they're good pocket money and help cover some of those expenses that therefore the student would not have to go back to their family and ask for. Thanks Evelyn, that's really good to know.