The morning of the interview, the summer heat was oppressive. His father wore his best starched white shirt. They stood in line outside the consulate with hundreds of others—each clutching a blue folder, each containing an I-20 from some American dream.
Then she smiled. "Your I-20 is in order. Your scholarship is excellent, and you have a credible plan. Your visa is approved. Welcome to the United States."
He said, "WPI teaches project-based leadership. Their motto is Lehr und Kunst —Theory and Practice. I want to use my OPT to work for a robotics company like Boston Dynamics or a research lab for three years. But India is building its own robotics ecosystem—the 'Make in India' initiative for automation. Long-term, I want to go back to Pune's MIDC industrial area and start a firm that retrofits legacy factories with affordable robotics. My uncle runs a small auto-components unit. He has 40 manual welders. He can't afford a $100,000 robot. I want to build a $20,000 one. WPI's hands-on curriculum is the perfect training ground for that."
She typed. "And what does your father do?"
Aarav pulled out a printed email chain. "Yes, ma'am. He said there might be a funded RA position in Spring. That would reduce my family's burden. It's in the folder."
She typed for thirty seconds. An eternity.
The morning of the interview, the summer heat was oppressive. His father wore his best starched white shirt. They stood in line outside the consulate with hundreds of others—each clutching a blue folder, each containing an I-20 from some American dream.
Then she smiled. "Your I-20 is in order. Your scholarship is excellent, and you have a credible plan. Your visa is approved. Welcome to the United States."
He said, "WPI teaches project-based leadership. Their motto is Lehr und Kunst —Theory and Practice. I want to use my OPT to work for a robotics company like Boston Dynamics or a research lab for three years. But India is building its own robotics ecosystem—the 'Make in India' initiative for automation. Long-term, I want to go back to Pune's MIDC industrial area and start a firm that retrofits legacy factories with affordable robotics. My uncle runs a small auto-components unit. He has 40 manual welders. He can't afford a $100,000 robot. I want to build a $20,000 one. WPI's hands-on curriculum is the perfect training ground for that."
She typed. "And what does your father do?"
Aarav pulled out a printed email chain. "Yes, ma'am. He said there might be a funded RA position in Spring. That would reduce my family's burden. It's in the folder."
She typed for thirty seconds. An eternity.