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Graduate Couples in Escondido VillageThe days are gone when graduate students were mainly male and if they did have families their wives probably weren't career-minded. As the graduate community becomes more diverse, many talented couples have a tougher and tougher time combining their diverse academic, career and personal goals into one family. Often couples consider themselves lucky if they get to live on the same continent. Moving to Stanford for the sake of your loved one's studies is a courageous and self-giving act, which often goes uncredited in a world whose expectation is that you should "look after number one". Many newcomers will be applying for jobs in the Bay Area and face completely different challenges from the high-profile round of courses, assignments and term-papers. These pages are designed to be a useful first-port-of-call for such couples, to connect you with the places where help is at hand. There is a separate page for J2-visa holders who might be applying for work permits at the moment.
Use of Stanford Facilities - Courtesy Cards
The Bechtel Center
A good place to start is the page for Spouses, Partners and Families. Whether you're looking for a job, learning English or thinking of applying to colleges and universities yourself, there should be something here to offer. The Career Development Center
Partners can also get a free interview with a careers advisor. The only thing you can't do is apply via the Cardinal Recruitment program - but I found that this catered more for those considering where in the states to start a career in a year's time, rather than where to get a job near Stanford as soon as possible. Plea for FeedbackThis page is thus far very incomplete - it is based mainly on one or two people's experiences with a few comments from other folk.If it hasn't helped you, then please email the webmaster to say why not, and what information we should have had, so that we can be sure to help someone in your place in the future. We are hoping to gradually collect information and experiences from you, the graduate community, about which local resources have been particularly useful, which companies have been friendly to applications from foreigners, and so on. With more information like this - a good contact here, a success story there - the non-student residents can begin to feel less like isolated individuals marking time but an active and dynamic group with a lot to contribute living and working throughout the Bay Area. E-mail the webmaster with comments. |