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U.S. Foreign Service Officer headed to Wuhan, China

The mission of a U.S. diplomat in the Foreign Service is to promote peace, support prosperity, and protect American citizens while advancing the interests of the U.S. abroad. The work that diplomats do has an impact on the world as they serve at one of any of the more than 270 embassies, consulates and other diplomatic missions in The Americas, Africa, Europe and Eurasia, East Asia and Pacific, Middle East and North Africa, and South Asia.

The duties of a Consular Officer include to provide emergency and non-emergency services to American citizens and protect our borders through the proper adjudication of visas to foreign nationals and passports to American citizens. We adjudicate immigrant and non-immigrant visas, facilitate adoptions, help evacuate Americans, combat fraud, and fight human trafficking. Consular Officers touch people’s lives in important ways, often reassuring families in crisis. They face many situations which require quick thinking under stress and develop and use a wide range of skills, from managing resources and conducting public outreach to assisting Americans in distress.

University life in pictures

Life at UESC (pronounced "Wes-Ski") or the Universidade Estadual de Santa Cruz is very different from, say, life at The Ohio State University or Hope College.  There are wildly different expectations, priorities, routines, relationships and types of technology and infrastructure.  I've tried to snap a few pictures of the funny things that caught my attention along with the ordinary and mundane details like what my shared office looks like.  I would say the most important things to keep in mind at UESC are patience and flexibility; nothing is guaranteed and everything is a unpredictable work in progress.  There are student protests, teacher strikes, power outages, class cancellations, classroom changes, multiple odd holidays, and constant printer/copier/computer/projector malfunctions.  One thing's for sure, however, it's never boring.

The desk that I used in my shared office; it has air conditioning - a HUGE bonus



Poster for "Language Week" - Loni and I have to organize this year's conference in November (Sean - you get to help too!)

Coffee and water are delivered every morning - though I could easily drink this whole thermos myself, it's normal here to only have a tiny cup/shot of coffee

Everything kind of comes to a halt when there's an important soccer game on, seriously.

Everything is tied down everywhere - scissors, pens, staplers etc.

Classes can be pretty casual sometimes . . . especially on Monday mornings
Documents only matter if they are stamped and signed by about fifty different departments - here you can see the hours and types of classes that Loni and I give.  Ahh the hoops and hurdles of the crazy bureaucracy.
Read More 1 Comment | Posted by Sarah Sanderson edit post

1 Comment

  1. Kate on April 9, 2013 at 3:10 PM

    I worked at a state university in Rhode Island for four years and they were just as bad with the signatures. Just to purchase something, I had to get 5 or 6 people to sign a piece of paper. The funniest thing is that as long as the person signed before them, they assumed everything was ok and just signed their name without actually checking anything. I wasted a lot of time running around getting the last signatures when all I really needed was the first!

     


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    Sarah Sanderson
    I am currently in Mandarin language training as a new diplomat in the U.S. Foreign Service. Sean and I depart for Wuhan, China in November 2019 for my first tour in consular affairs.
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    Grateful for my very tolerant, supportive and easygoing husband who's always game for a new adventure

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