“Every gap year student should have some skills training to help them travel in a more sensible and informed way. There are very few things in life that we expect to go off and do with no training, so why do we assume that travelling in the developing world can be achieved without preparation?”

Charlotte Hindle – author of Lonely Planet’s ‘Gap Year Guide’

Tuesday 14 August 2007

I was abandoned as soon as I landed

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Title – I was abandoned as soon as I landed
Source – The Times
Date – 14th August 2007

This is an all too common story, you pay all your money up front and once you set off the company you booked through are more concerned about where their next booking is coming from, rather then your plight on the other side of the world and you end up so far out of your comfort zone you can’t even remember what life back home was like.

The projects themselves are often badly researched, inappropriate, misjudged or wholly unnecessary, in the worst scenarios, gap-year volunteers actually hinder local communities rather then provide any form of assistance. We have heard stories of people turning up to their placements to be greeted by blank looks from local staff asking themselves who this strange westerner is who has just offered their services. Following a quick call to the local contact, it is revealed that no one from the company has ever visited the project, but had heard third hand from others that they were looking for English teachers.

We regularly hear stories like Sarah’s, they don’t all end happily, many students buckle under the pressure they have simply not been prepared for and leave for home soon after they arrive but many, like Sarah, realise their potential and struggle through making the projects all the more fulfilling for them. Happy endings are common but so are the failures, but if you are promised the support then you deserve to get it, even if with hindsight you did manage on your own, what justifies the £3000 you paid?

We saw the advice booklet from one such company that students are supplied with to 'prepare' them for travel, it contained some useful information which anyone could have gleaned from the FCO website and then among the safety advice was the useful hint “when in a busy train station, do not take large quantities of cash out of your wallet and have it on public display or it might be stolen by someone rushing past you”. It was accompanied by a representation of a man in a busy station holding his cash like a hand of cards and a second drawing of him without the cash looking glum and a local running off in the background…. Do you feel ready to travel now?

People should not feel bad about taking a gap-year for fun or not having a fixed project when they arrive at their destination, often they can have equally great experiences or work at their destination without having to pay a lump sum to someone else to organise it. The thousands of pounds you save can prove very useful to you on your travels or to people you meet along the way. The old adage “don’t give a hungry person a fish, give them a net to allow them to fish” still stands. The key if you do go on an organised gap-year volunteering programme is to research the company and the project they are sending you on and don’t rely on their flashy marketing. Look behind the gloss and get them to commit to exactly what they will provide. If they fail in their commitment ask for a refund or write to trading standards and demand they meet the same standards any other commercial company has to. Remember that although many of them act like charities, very few actually are!

Much of the appeal of these gap-year companies is the support they offer, but there are other ways of getting that confidence to set out. At Beyond The Blue our Gap Year and Independent Travel Safety and Awareness workshop provides candidates with knowledge and skills to travel independently with confidence and to prepare for your travels adequately considering your destination. We offer you the support you need before you leave home so that you can learn some of the essential skills required as well as being mentally prepared for what you are about to encounter when you arrive.



Please visit our website at www.safegapyear.com

Gap-year students told to forget aid projects

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Title – Gap-year students told to forget aid projects
Source – The Times
Date – 14th August 2007

There are undoubtedly many gap-year students that partake in gap-year volunteering projects that do benefit local communities as well as giving the students themselves an experience that will potentially change their outlook on life and potentially their career options and opportunities. But as this article and VSO suggest there are many stories of students paying large sums of money for very little in return and what exactly are they paying for?

Figures of students paying £1500-3000 to companies to facilitating gap-year volunteering programmes are common, but these often don’t cover flights and provide individuals with accommodation in 'local' lodgings or with families. This experience of living in very basic accommodation can be a great learning curve; it makes students experience for a short while what locals experience for a lifetime and gives them a grounding to work alongside local people. But this type of accommodation is also generally very cheap to provide and often costs as little as £25 – 50 a month when booked by an individual, not to mention the discounts a company would get booking in bulk.

Then you will be promised an in-country support network; but often this is no more then someone on the end of a telephone sometimes many many miles away in a different part of the country. The qualifications they have to be your support often varies significantly; sometimes they are no more then someone who has done a programme the previous year and who returns at a discount if they go back as the local contact. We have even come across situations where companies make gap-year volunteers who have been in-country for just 6 weeks the in-country contact.

There are endless stories and it’s not all bad, thousands of gap-year volunteers go out each year and work hard to do their little bit to make things better and many return home reinvigorated and enthused by what they have achieved and what they have learned from their hosts. Many of the communities they visit benefit not just from a wall they may have built, or a fence they have fixed, but by the experience of sharing their way of life and learning a bit about ours.

People should not feel bad about taking a gap-year for fun or not having a fixed project when they arrive at their destination, often they can have equally great experiences or work at their destination without having to pay a lump sum to someone else to organise it. The thousands of pounds you save can prove very useful to you on your travels or to people you meet along the way. The old adage “don’t give a hungry person a fish, give them a net to allow them to fish” still stands. The key if you do go on an organised gap-year volunteering programme is to research the company and the project they are sending you on and don’t rely on their flashy marketing. Look behind the gloss and get them to commit to exactly what they will provide. If they fail in their commitment ask for a refund or write to trading standards and demand they meet the same standards any other commercial company has to. Remember that although many of them act like charities, very few actually are!

Much of the appeal of these gap-year companies is the support they offer, but there are other ways of getting that confidence to set out. At Beyond The Blue our Gap Year and Independent Travel Safety and Awareness workshop provides candidates with knowledge and skills to travel independently with confidence and to prepare for your travels adequately considering your destination. We offer you the support you need before you leave home so that you can learn some of the essential skills required as well as being mentally prepared for what you are about to encounter when you arrive.



Please visit our website at www.safegapyear.com

Friday 3 August 2007

Holidays from hell

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Title – Holidays from hell
Source – The Guardian
Date – 3rd August 2007

How many times do we see headlines like this? Newspapers, magazines and the plethora of TV programmes entitled; “The worst ever …” or “The worlds most dangerous…”. It’s a wonder we ever choose to leave our own shores.

There are undoubtedly dangers of varying degrees out there for even the average traveller let alone the intrepid traveller. This article highlights some of these with statistics such as the five most dangerous destinations: 1. Thailand – 224 Deaths; 2. Australia: 59 Deaths; 3. India: 111 Deaths; 4. Czech Republic: 16 Deaths, 1 Rape, 445 lost passports, 52 Hospitalisations; 5. Greece 139 Deaths, 955 Hospitalisations, 48 Rapes. Rape is also a higher risk in; Spain: 41 Rapes; Turkey: 38 Rapes.

But statistics must always be put into context, of the 224 deaths in Thailand, the vast majority were from natural causes and involved elderly visitors and ex-pats. But there are a significant number of serious incidents the ruin holidays, result in serious injury or loss of valuables that are wholly avoidable.

Many of these destinations are actually no more dangerous then being in London, the difference is that we have grown up aware of the dangers we face in our everyday lives at home and we have taught our children to be aware of them. However the same rules don’t apply equally across the world and too many people try to use what is acceptable behaviour in their own country to resolve problems in countries where such behaviour or actions may actually make the situation worse.

Our two day Gap Year and Independent Travel Safety and Awareness workshop provides those attending with an insight into the culture and traditions of the countries they intend to visit. With conflict management and resolution skills to avoid potentially dangerous situations in the first place and personal safety techniques designed to allow individuals to remove themselves physically from dangerous situations when they get out of hand, candidates can set off on their travels with renewed confidence gained through the skills they learn. We also offer practical advice on how to remain safe both from people, disease, accidents and the elements.



Please visit our website at www.safegapyear.com