- consular services (visas, passport issues, medical care, legal counsel)
- political services (government to government relations)
- economic services (global business development, reinforcing Morocco-U.S. Free Trade Agreement, 2006)
- public affairs (exchanges, speakers programs, grants, initiatives)
Ms. Bullock is the director of the Cultural Affairs Department, a division of public affairs that advocated cultural understanding and diplomacy. The Cultural Affairs office also supports and sponsors the following educational and cultural programs:
- Consulate General's Public Affairs office and American library (in Casablanca)- provides students, citizens, and visitors with books, discussion groups, online courses, webchats, and film screenings. click here for their facebook page
- 11 American Language Centers in Morocco- run by the American Cultural Association, a non-profit, bi-national organization aimed at teaching American English as a second language. I understand that one of these language centers is in Meknes and my host teacher teaches courses at the center in the evening.
- American Corners (public speaking clubs, song clubs, poetry clubs, video clubs) in Marrakech and Oujda
- Fulbright programs aimed at sending Moroccan students to the U.S.
- Techgirls program designed to facilitate exchanges for young girls interested in pursuing careers in science and technology- emphasis on programming, robotics, app building, web design, game and video graphic design. Young ladies travel to the U.S. for 3 weeks and then present their new skills and action plans upon their return.
- Between the Lines writer's workshop - Moroccan students travel to the U.S. to develop their writing skills in both Arabic and English, while also developing a better understanding of U.S. culture.
- programs specifically created for women's leadership, social entrepreneurship, teacher professional development
- TESOL- English language Teaching Fellowship- American teachers with masters in teaching English as a Second Language can qualify for an exchange program
- English Access MicroScholarships- developed after the 2003 suicide bombings in Casablanca- aims at teaching English as a second language through real-world activities- classes taught to underprivileged students in the evenings. Check out this youtube video celebrating the 10th anniversary of ACCESS: