What Is Gap Year?

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A gap year is an experiential semester or year “on,” typically taken between high school and college in order to deepen practical, professional, and personal awareness.

Some of the most common gap year plans fit the following profile, with an emphasis on experiential educationand challenging comfort zones / sacrifice. Intentional gap years benefit students in some profound ways: Providing clarity and purpose, the student will have a better grasp on what they want to study; Improving earning and business potential with a global background that is tested in the real world; and Improving academic outcomes such as GPA, time-to-graduation, and leadership.

 

 

 

source: https://www.gapyearassociation.org/educators.php

7 Questions to Ask When Considering a Gap Year

By Rebecca Kern, Contributor |May 19, 2010, at 9:00 a.m.

A woman holding a map and looking around.

(Getty Images)

While it has been a longtime tradition for high school graduates in Europe to spend a “gap year” traveling the world and volunteering before college, this practice is becoming more popular and accepted in the United States. U.S. News spoke with students who took a gap year before college, as well as gap year counselors and college admissions officials, to answer common questions related to taking a gap year.

1. What exactly is a gap year?

The all-encompassing term “gap year” has taken on different meanings over the years. Holly Bull, president of the 30-year-old Center for Interim Programs, the first and longest-running gap year counseling organization in the United States, defines a gap year as a period of time that people use to explore areas of interest. Bull, who took a gap year before college and another one during college, has been counseling for 20 years, and says a gap year doesn’t have to last a full year and can be taken at any age, but the typical gap year is taken by students between high school and college.

Gail Reardon, who runs the gap year counseling firm Taking Off, says the term is a bit of a misnomer. “The name implies that students are taking a gap in their education, when really the gap is to fill in what they haven’t learned in school,” she says. “A gap year is about what happens after school, how you make decisions, how you figure out who you are, where you want to go, and how you need to get there. It’s about the skill set you need to live your life.”

2. I want to go to college. Should I apply before or after I take a gap year?

Most counselors and college admissions officials encourage high school seniors to apply and get accepted to college before taking a gap year. Reardon says students should apply to college while in high school because their junior and senior years are set up to support the college application process. William Fitzsimmons, dean of admissions and financial aid at Harvard, says Harvard accepts students who apply after their gap year. However, he says it is logistically easier for both students and admissions officials when the student applies before taking a gap year, particularly if they are going abroad where correspondence may be difficult.

Students who have been accepted to a college, but want to take a gap year before attending, should defer their admittance, says Kristin White, director of Darien Academic Advisors and author of The Complete Guide to the Gap Year. Students wishing to defer college should send a letter to their college’s director of admissions and outline what they plan to do for their gap year. The admissions committee will evaluate the letter and, in most cases, grant the deferral, she says. White advises students to send their deferral letters between April and mid-June. At the very latest, students should send their requests before their first fall tuition payments are due, which is usually July 1 or August 1.

3. Can I still get financial aid and scholarships for college after doing a gap year?

If a student has qualified for federal financial aid but has deferred college for a year, he or she will have to re-apply the following year by filling out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. If their family’s financial circumstances haven’t changed significantly, the student will likely receive aid again, says Bull of the Center for Interim Projects.

Some scholarships offered by colleges can be held for the student until they attend the next year. “Scholarships vary by school, but if you’ve been offered it once, you have a good shot of being offered it again,” Bull says. Cheryl Brown, the director of undergraduate admissions at Binghamton University, reassures students and parents about scholarships from her school, saying, “If the student is accepted for any scholarship, depending on the parameters of the scholarship, we try to hold it for them when they return.”

4. Are there affordable options for a gap year?

Many domestic and international programs charge little to no fees. Bull recommends students look for programs that offer free housing and food in turn for volunteer work. But be prepared to work. Zack Sills just completed his gap year, and from September to November 2009, he lived for free on a ranch in British Columbia. In return for food and housing, he cut firewood, took care of livestock, and worked in the kitchen. The only expensive part was the flights to and from British Columbia to his home on Chicago’s North Shore, he says.

White, of Darien Academic Advisors, recommends students look into AmeriCorps programs, which provide health care benefits, a living stipend, and $5,350 from the Segal AmeriCorps Education Award at the end to use toward college. This amount is tied to the maximum Pell Grant amount. Better yet, 92 colleges and universities offer to match this AmeriCorps education award, essentially doubling its value. Students can also volunteer for programs such as Habitat for Humanity and World Wide Opportunities on Organic Farms, commonly known as WWOOF, though students will have to fund their living expenses in some cases.

Gap years can also save parents money in the long run. Steve Goodman, an educational consultant and college admissions strategist, says, “If a gap year clarifies what a student is going to do college, it pays back in college because you’re saving tuition money for the time a student may have spent clarifying their major.”

5. What are the benefits of a gap year?

Gap year consultants, students, parents, and even college admissions officials all claim that gap year experiences make these students more mature, confident, and career driven. Goodman says, “Taking a gap year can clarify the intellectual, academic, and professional objectives of a student.” While there has been no formal research done by the U.S. government on the benefits of a gap year experience, Rae Nelson and Karl Haigler, authors of The Gap Year Advantage, surveyed 280 gap year alumni from November 2007 through February 2008 about how the experience molded their lives. Sixty percent said their gap year affected their majors and careers by either confirming an early direction or channeling them to a new path. Brown, of Binghamton University, says, “The students do very well when they enroll at Binghamton—many become leaders in cultural clubs and organizations and bring an increased maturity and cultural savvy to the campus.”

The students emphasize that the experiential learning during their gap year was unlike any they could gain in the college classroom. Sills, 19, says, “I learned just as much in my nineteenth year than I probably learned in my last two years of high school. When I was in Canada, I was the only American at the ranch. There were Canadians, Germans, and Australians, so it really made me appreciate other cultures. I learned a lot in Canada; the type of work I did made me come outside of my comfort zone.” Sills spent the other half of his gap year interning for a film production company in New Zealand. He says this experience helped prepare him to pursue a film degree this fall at the School of Visual Arts in New York City.

Emily Carr, 19, spent September to December 2009 taking courses related to marine biology while on a boat that toured the Eastern Caribbean. For the rest of her gap year, she spent this spring volunteering for a penguin and sea bird hospital in Cape Town, South Africa, and then in an animal rescue and refuge center outside of Bangkok, Thailand. “My gap year helped me build my people skills, gain more independence, and more maturity. There’s no way to not become more mature after this,” Carr says.

6. What do college admissions officials think of gap years?

College admission officials have become more accepting of the gap year over the past several years. Some even encourage their admitted students to take one. For more than 30 years, Harvard’s acceptance letters have included a suggestion that students take time off before enrolling. Fitzsimmons encourages students to take a gap year so they don’t burn out in college. Those who come to school after a gap year are “so fresh, anxious, and excited to be back in school,” he says. “The feedback from students almost all the time has been that this experience was transformative. The more life experience you bring, the better off you are in school.” In 2009, a near-record 107 of the 1,665 Harvard freshmen had taken a gap year.

At Binghamton, Brown has also noticed an increase in the number of students taking a gap year. In 2009, 52 of approximately 2,100 freshmen deferred for a year to work or volunteer. Brown says she’s only seen positive results from these students. “I think the increased maturity, self confidence, sense of problem solving, and recognition that they can do these kinds of wonderful things only serves them well in their college experience,” she says.

7. Will it be hard to transition to college after a gap year?

“Students who are going to college after a gap year are going into it more mature and better prepared than others,” says White, of Darien Academic Advisors. Many of these students have some apprehension about returning to the classroom, but are able to transition easily because they have already been away from home, White says. Carr, who just finished a gap year, plans to work in her hometown of Princeton, N.J., this summer and possibly this fall, and apply to Colorado College for the spring 2011 semester. “I’m excited to go back to school. I really want to continue the learning process,” she says. “However, I think it’s going to be really hard at first, to have to write papers and study for tests. It will be a transition. I’ll have to adapt to that environment again.” But Carr says that, if anything, the gap year experience has taught her to adapt well to new locales, anywhere from Cape Town to Colorado.

(source: https://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/right-school/timeline/articles/2010/05/19/7-questions-to-ask-when-considering-a-gap-year)

– Alena Jacinto

10 Reasons You Should Take A Gap Year

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With the recent news that Malia Obama will take a gap year before her freshman year at Harvard, the world will surely watch with anticipation to learn how she will spend the 365 days between high school and college.

While it’s not common in the U.S., taking a gap year is considered the norm in some countries all over the world, including the United Kingdom and Australia. Many colleges and universities in the U.S. not only accept applicants who choose to take gap years, but also actively encourage enrolled students to study abroad during their college tenures. According to study abroad organization CIEE, Harvard College has seen a 33 percent increase in the number of their incoming students taking gap years.

That might be due, in part, to the school’s acceptance letters. According to U.S. News & World Report, acceptance letters from Harvard even suggest that students might want to take time off before they enroll.

Taking a gap year between high school and college can be tremendously beneficial to one’s personal growth, whether one decides on enrolling in a structured gap year program, spend time volunteering abroad or simply traveling the world. Regardless, taking a gap year means that you’re living life to the fullest. Here are 10 reasons why.

1. You’ll perform better in college.
Students might worry that college admissions officials or professors will look down on them for taking a gap year. This isn’t true: many schools report that gap year students have higher GPAs and are more involved on campus, so their attitudes toward gap years are far from unfavorable.

2. You’ll realize what you love before you start studying.
More often than not, college students commit themselves to one area of study, realize it’s not for them, and then swap to a completely different major… often two or three times. You’ll cut down on coursework, tuition bills and stress if you take time before college to decide how you want to spend your academic experience before you get there.

3. You’ll get to adventure at your prime.
When else are you going to be 18 years old with no job, no mortgage payments, no significant other, no kids, no homework and no worries? Never. The answer is never.

4. You’ll know what’s important in life before most people do. 
College is ridiculously fun, but it’s easy to get so caught up that you begin to believe your fraternity or friend group is the absolute center of the universe. As such, any small crisis might seem like the end of the world. However, if you’ve traveled the wider world in all its complexity and glory, you’ll understand there are bigger issues for humanity than a failed date night or lost game of beer pong.

5. You’ll be an expert at adapting to new places.
On a gap year, you’ll be forced to integrate into a new society, a new group of friends, and maybe even new languages or cultural norms. College requires similar adaptation skills, and you’ll be much more ready to handle it if you’ve already shifted societies once before.

6. You’ll have something to talk about.
Skip the same old “where are you from?” and “what’s your major?” chitchat, and nail the “what’d you do this summer?” question with stories from your gap year. You’ll have first-hand opinions to share about people, places and ideas that your peers might have never even heard of.

7. You’ll have a shinier resume.
Oftentimes, a gap year involves staying in one spot and soaking up its culture, part of which means getting a job. No matter where you work — a sandwich stand in India or the embassy in London — you’ll have valuable (international!) experience for your resume and can explain your ability to do business with customers from different cultures. If you travel on the cheap, you might even have some earnings left to use on college tuition.

8. You’ll pick up the pieces you missed in high school. 
Slept through every Spanish class? Head to Argentina for your gap year, where you’ll be forced to speak the language every day. Wish you knew more history? Spend time touring government buildings in Europe. A gap year is your time to refine the specific skills you feel like you’re lacking and sharpen them up for college.

9. You’ll have time to think.
Life feels like it’s unfolding fast right now, and in college, things only move faster. Give yourself room to think and breathe and be on long train rides from country to country or in days spent strolling through new towns. You’ll be surprised where your mind wanders when you give it free rein.

10. You’ll make new friends.
How cool would it be to go through life knowing you have a best friend in Italy or a pen pal in New Zealand? Their unique perspectives on life will hugely enrich yours as you compare all the major events that happen in your 20s and beyond. Plus, you’ll have crazy awesome places to visit during college breaks.

 

source:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2016/05/01/why-harvard-encourages-students-to-take-a-gap-year-just-like-malia-obama-is-doing/?utm_term=.95951bca27aa

What is a Gap Year?

What is a Gap Year?

Gap year c’est quoi

Today, thousands of people are taking gap years all over the world, travelling to destinations such as Australia, New Zealand and Thailand for months on end, travelling with relative comfort and ease. Today, a gap year can be anywhere, for any length of time, doing anything you want. You can build an orphanage in Belize, teach English as a foreign language in Israel, trek through the Himalayas in Nepal or travel around the ‘banana pancake trail’ in South East Asia. A gap year really is whatever you want it to be.

A gap year comes under many guises – backpacking, a career gap, a short gap year, travelling, time out, a sabbatical – but they all mean the same thing. A gap year is constructive time out to travel in-between life stages. It usually means travelling, volunteering or working abroad. Often it means all three!

Backpacking and travelling is particularly popular among students in the UK, Australia,New Zealand, Canada and the Netherlands, and a number of countries (including the ones stated) offer working holiday visas to improve cultural ties and foreign exchange.

Another country that is starting to get in on the gap year action is the United States of Americawith more and more people travelling each year.

Gap years are now seen as a way to improve your CV and to gain relevant work experience in a particular field, with employers actively employing people who have taken a gap year.

Whether you see a gap year as backpacking or taking time out, it’s about living life to the full and realising that there is a world of opportunity out there just waiting to be explored…

What is a Gap Year?

Traditional Gap Years

What is a ‘traditional’ gap year?

In the UK a ‘gap year’ was traditionally viewed as the activity of taking time out before university. The word on the street was that it involved travel for the wealthy few and pretty much nothing for the rest of us. Nowadays, however, all sorts of people are going backpacking and travelling, doing a thousand different things. The people who are out there taking gap years are of all ages, from all walks of life, but they all have one thing in common – they want to see the world!

Gap years are now as common as going on holiday, and people are treating them as such! People aren’t just content with sitting on a beach for two weeks. They want to sit on a few beaches and travel around. With cheap flights and countries opening their doors to tourism, taking a gap year has never been so easy, and it’s now seen as a positive rather than a negative.

Everyone’s talking about travelling and gap years. And when they’re not talking about it, they’re sharing it on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Blogger; photos, updates, videos, blogs. They’re all linked together, and they’re all promoting gap years. Nothing makes you want to travel more than seeing a friends photo of a beautiful beach with the tagline “Wish you were here…”

Future Gap Years

What is the future of gap years?

What is the gap year to become? Pre-university gaps, during and post-university gaps, career-gaps (fastest growing gap year market), pre and post-baby gaps, ‘stag’ and ‘hen’ gaps, post-wedding gaps, pre-retirement gaps (second fastest growing market) – the list goes on, but do you see the one thing in common? Gap years. One thing’s for certain is people love em and they’re becoming more and more popular.

From the age of 18, people will now become ‘serial gappers’ as they head through each life stage, taking a gap year to prepare themselves for the transition ahead. The result will be a change in the mentality of society, away from the ‘live to work, work to live’ routine of a slow climb up a career ladder to a more exciting life path which simply involves doing what they enjoy in life and achieving that dream.

People will forever want to travel, to experience and to share. After all, life is short. Why waste your time doing things you don’t enjoy?!

Take a gap year and see the world


Top Tips for your Gap Year:

  • Do your research – speak to people who’ve been there and done it. Have a search around the site and ask questions. We’re here to give you the best possible gap year advice and information, so get stuck in!
  • Take time to plan and prepare – it can take 9-12 months to plan your gap year and to raise the funds, so make sure you give yourself time to prepare.
  • Budget, but don’t get hung up on saving money at all costs so that you miss out on once-in-a-lifetime opportunities – have a reserve of money to fall back on. A gap year is about enjoying yourself – don’t forget you can do that at home too!
  • Be open-minded – a gap year is all about new experiences. Often you’ll find that the word you use most is ‘yes’.
  • Use the time to make contacts – this is an important time to develop networks that could help you in your future career. Get on the messageboards and see if anyone is planning a similar kind of trip as you. Be friendly, get chatting, and start planning your gap year!
  • Enjoy – oh, and most importantly, enjoy it…

source: https://www.gapyear.com/articles/90431/what-is-a-gap-year

-Plotena, Chinie

How a Gap Year Can Make Students Successful

Research shows students who take a gap year between high school and college do better once they get to school. By Margaret Loftus

Cheerful backpackers looking map on the street in the city.

Counselors usually encourage high school students who are considering taking a gap year to apply to college and defer their acceptance if necessary.(iStockphoto)

Long a rite of passage for affluent Brits, a gap year spent traveling, volunteering or working between high school and college is now really catching on among U.S. students.

A survey by the American Gap Association, a nonprofit that accredits companies that coordinate these stints, found that enrollment in respondents’ programs climbed 27 percent from 2012 to 2013.

Many students handle their own planning and logistics. But there’s a whole industry bidding for gap-year business, from the Pioneer Project, through which students learn skills like beekeeping and blacksmithing on a North Carolina farm, to Art History Abroad, which offers six-week courses in Italy.

“We aren’t creating demand,” says Alan Solomont, dean of Tufts’ Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service. “We’re responding to appetite.”

Burnout is one of the top reasons students take a break, according to an independent study of 280 gap-year participants by education policy experts Karl Haigler and Rae Nelson, authors of “Gap Year, American Style: Journeys Toward Learning, Serving, and Self-Discovery.” Subjects in the Haigler and Nelson study also cited a desire to find out more about themselves.

Kim Oppelt, a former school counselor, now community relations manager at education solutions provider Hobsons in Arlington, Virginia, says high school students used to have the time to sample a variety of electives, but they’re “now under pressure to take advanced courses in every subject for all four years of high school. This gives them little time to explore their true interests.”

And families increasingly “are looking for value. They’re thinking, ‘if I’m spending this much on college, I want every year to count,'” says AGA Executive Director Ethan Knight.

Recent Cornell University grad Wes Cornell says his year doing scientific research shaped his academic focus. In Costa Rica, he researched the health care of workers at coffee farms through Duke University’s Organization for Tropical Studies and did a program on sustainable development and tropical ecology with an environmental study abroad organization. He interned with the Colombia Nature Conservancy in Cartagena, and researched viral pathways at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.

At Cornell, where he studied ecology and agriculture policy, he noticed classmates struggling to find themselves. “Having had time off, I was able to figure out what really interested me,” he says.

Research has shown that “gappers” perform better in school than their peers. A 2011 study at Middlebury College conducted by its former dean of admissions Robert Clagett found that students who had taken a year off had consistently higher GPAs than those who didn’t. “A lot of our students say when they enter as freshman that they have a greater sense of purpose in their studies,” says Princeton’s Bridge Year Director John Luria.

One goal of AGA is to make aid available to students to use for gap years so the experience isn’t available only to the affluent. But gap years don’t have to cost a fortune.

Programs sponsored by colleges typically cover part or most of the expense. At UNC, participants in the Global Gap Year Fellowship are granted $7,500 to develop their own six-month service experience. Princeton’s Bridge Year is a nine-month tuition-free program that places small groups at sites in five countries – Brazil, China, India, Peru and Senegal – to do service projects.

Kicking off in the fall of 2015, Tufts’ 1+4 program is aimed at democratizing the gap experience. “When we looked at our own data in terms of students who have deferred admission to take a gap year on their own, they are disproportionately self-paying,” says Solomont. “We want to make sure students who need financial assistance aren’t precluded, so we’ll provide aid.”

The program will place participants in service organizations domestically and internationally.

Counselors typically encourage studentsweighing a year off to apply to college anyway, and defer acceptance if they decide to go for it.

On the other hand, “it may be the case that waiting to apply during the gap year could improve your chances of getting in the school of your choice,” says Haigler, who once worked as a college counselor. “You might also find a school that is more suited to your evolving interest, the skills and knowledge you develop and what you learn about yourself.”

A Review of What Gap Years Are About and Where They Came From

The history of the gap year is long and rich, and gap years have come a long way since they first started in the 1960s. The gap year we know today is very different to what it once was, but it’s clear where it came from.

Today, hundreds of thousands of people are taking gap years all over the world. Some last more than a year, some less, but they’re all about taking a break that is much more than a holiday. Many travel to places such as Australia, New Zealand and Thailand for months on end, travelling in relative comfort and ease, but its taken a long time to get where we are today, and gap years have come a long way.

A gap year can be anywhere, for any length of time, doing anything you want. Though almost all gappers are looking for an enriching experience, there are lots of different ways to achieve it. You can build an orphanage in Colombia; teach English as a foreign language in Japan; trek through the Himalayas in Nepal or travel around the ‘banana pancake trail’ in South East Asia. The only thing that’s limiting you is your ambition and imagination.

However, it wasn’t always like this and there’s a clear gap year history. Many things have changed since gap years first became a recognisable phenomenon in the 1960s. These were the years when the young generation shook off the post-war austerity and grew the confidence to ask if their lives had to be the same as their parents’. Gap years were part of this cultural and social revolution, and if there’s one thing that has remained the same throughout the ages it’s the essence of travelling.

A gap year is about new challenges and new experiences, seeing new countries and meeting new people. It’s about living life to the full and realising there’s a world of opportunity out there just waiting to be explored.

But the question is, when did it all start?

Gap Years Are Born

Gap Years Are Born

The 60’s was a time of freedom of speech and independence, a time of cultural and social revolution, and the decade that gap years were first made popular. Arguably gap years started as cultural exchanges, discussed among governments as a useful tool to create global awareness and understanding in an attempt to prevent further world wars from occurring. Little did they know they were creating the gap year as well.

A richer spiritual life was what many of these travellers were looking for and they initially set their sights on India, a country that was open to different cultures and change. People in their droves trod the hippie trail from Delhi down to Goa, setting a precedence of backpacking for years to come, on a route that is still followed today.

In 1967, Nicholas Maclean-Bristol set up the company Project Trust and sent three volunteers to Addis Ababa in Ethiopia. According to Project Trust “the young volunteers would of course assist in the building of a developing nation but, at such an impressionable age, they would also be learning about Ethiopia, developing their own skills and learning to live independently at the same time. Forty years on and those aims remain unchanged.” The desire to do something to help others abroad had been there before but now there was a straightforward way to achieve it and a volunteering ethos was born.

Driving a Dragoman truck

The Champions of Gap Years

As the 60s turned into the 70s, gap years continued to grow in popularity. Flights were still expensive so gappers turned to buses instead. The mode of transport didn’t matter; it was all about the journey, not the destination.

In 1973, a young London-based Australian, Graham ‘Skroo’ Turner bought a double-decker bus, sold tickets and drove his paying customers to Kathmandu.

As anyone who’s read Rory Maclean’s book Magic Bus will know, the first trips were epic. They had nothing more than enough money for fuel and the shared desire for the unknown. They slowly wound their way through countries like Turkey, Iran and India, truly experiencing what it meant to travel. Turner went on to found the highly successful Flight Centre and Topdeck Travel companies, two companies that are still booming today.

In the same year, Tony Wheeler, and his then girlfriend (now wife), Maureen, embarked on an overland trip to Asia. From it, they drew inspiration to write a travel guidebook, Across Asia on the Cheap. It became the first title for the new publisher Lonely Planet. Tony and Maureen wrote it, published it and sold it. At the time they just wanted to pass on their experiences, to give other travellers advice and information. Today, Lonely Planet is the world’s largest travel guidebook publisher with over 500 titles, and it all started on a gap year.

In 1977, GAP Activity Projects (now Lattitude Global Volunteering), a UK organization, set-up volunteer placements for students who wanted to travel between school and university. This was a continuation of what had been started by Project Trust ten years before. The classic between-school-and-university gap years began to grow.

In 1978, the Prince of Wales and Colonel John Blashford-Snell began what is now known as Raleigh International by launching Operation Drake, an expeditionary voyage following Sir Francis Drake’s route around the world. In essence, this was the first round the world trip, and combining a gap year with a round the world trips has grown in popularity ever since.

With a tour company offering cheap flights, a volunteering company and a guidebook, the independent travel market was born. The gap year foundations were firmly in place. All that was needed was the gappers, and what followed was an explosion in the gap year industry.

Working on a truck

The Explosion of Gap Years

Gap years continued to grow throughout the 80s and early 90s and as time went on the history of the gap year started to change. Backpacking was the popular thing to do. It was hip. It was cool. Independent travel and backpacking was getting easier, less risky, and most importantly, cheaper. Demand grew, prices for air travel fell and all of a sudden taking a gap year had become a rite of passage for pre-university students in the UK.

As the industry grew people who’d done their own gap years were coming back and starting their own businesses. One such person was Tom Griffiths.

Much like Tony Wheeler, Tom was buzzing with excitement when he got back from his second gap year. Enthused, all he wanted to do was share his experiences and to give advice to the masses on backpacking and travelling; to inspire people to follow their dreams much like he had done. He realised that the gap year needed to be updated and brought into the new millennium on a new platform, so, in 1998, he and business partner Peter Pedrick founded gapyear.com.

Gapyear.com was one of the first ever online social networks, specifically aimed at backpackers to share their stories and experiences. Other sites have come and gone but gapyear.com continues to be the number one place to talk all things gap year.

In July 2005, the economic and business forecasters Mintel valued the gap year travel industry globally at £5bn a year and identified it as one of the fastest growing sectors of the travel industry. Not only were gap years here but they were here to stay.

With an online platform tapping into technology that was increasingly accessible, gap years grew from strength to strength, as did the companies around it.

The Future of Gap Years

The Future of Gap Years

Today, going on a gap year is as popular and as common as going on a two-week holiday. It doesn’t matter what type of gap year you’re taking, all that matters is you’re taking one. The point is gap years are no longer just for the young and rich. Backpacking and travelling is accessible to all ages, from all backgrounds, and there’s never been a better time to travel.

Going to university is becoming less of a clear-cut benefit, working lives are getting more complex and more and more of us are finding our work involves international cooperation or competition. In conjunction with that, what was once a luxury only affordable to British and Commonwealth youngsters is now affordable to all. More and more people from all over the world are taking gap years, especially from the United States.

Taking a gap year now is seen as an asset in the work place and employers are actively encouraging people to take gap years to earn skills and ‘life experience’. They want confidence and the ability to communicate across cultures. In a survey for gapyear.com in 2011, 63% of UK HR professionals said that a constructive gap year spent volunteering or gaining work experience overseas made a job application stand out. In the future it will be less a question of whether you can afford to have a gap year and more whether you can afford not to have one.

But even more important than finding a job is finding the right way to live. We may smile now when we think of those bearded guys and beaded girls catching the bus to India, but they wanted a genuine experience. They wanted to grow as a group and as individuals.

People will always want to test and challenge themselves, to gain new experiences, and that’s exactly that gap years are all about.

People will forever want to travel, to experience, and to share… just make sure you do too…

source: https://www.gapyear.com/articles/175601/the-history-of-the-gap-year

10 Benefits of a Gap Year

Why take a gap year between high school and college? That is just one of many questions you’re considering as you wrap up your high school experience, and there are many answers.

For starters, a gap year (or bridge year) can help you learn and appreciate a culture outside of the United States. It can better prepare you for college or boost your future employment potential.

It can also give you the time and experience to make tough decisions, like what you truly want to study or what career to pursue. And that’s just the beginning. Check out these 10 gap year benefits to create a fulfilling bridge year!

Why Take a Gap Year: 10 Gap Year Benefits

why take a gap year senegal bridge year

By choosing to take a bridge year, you’re choosing to expand your world. Here are 10 benefits of a gap year:

  1. Experience a different culture. A vacation allows you to see a different culture. A gap year allows you to live it. You’ll spend nine months fully immersed in a whole new world.
  2. Learn a new language. We live in an increasingly global society and what better way to pick up a new language — or sharpen an old one — than by immersing yourself with native speakers?
  3. Develop new life skills. Hone your global competency, learn about entrepreneurialism and improve your ability to communicate and adapt quickly in the face of challenges.
  4. Discover a hidden passion. Whether it’s photography, organic farming or international relations, a gap year can help you find dormant interests.
  5. Prep for college. A gap year can teach you the independence and maturity neededto make the most of college. Plus, colleges show preference to students who display commitment, passion, and perseverance to something bigger than themselves.
  6. Improve yourself. You’ll be working alongside local residents on projects that matter to them, but you’ll also be learning and developing your own skills in the process. Sure, you’ll be making an impact, but you’re going to gain just as much, or more, from the experience as the local community.
  7. Live life to the fullest. Spending a year in another country will bring adventures, stories and memories to last a lifetime. Follow along with our current Fellows in the field!
  8. Boost your job prospects. Participating in a bridge year displays the qualities many employers look for in a prospect: courage, teamwork, curiosity, service, open-mindedness and a willingness to try something new. The grit you’ll acquire can be a cornerstone to success.
  9. Break down classroom walls. You’ve been sitting in classrooms for years. A bridge year gets you out of a desk and into the real world, and is a great way to recharge your battery before college.
  10. Have fun and make lasting friendships. You’ll be an active member of a community teaming up with local professionals and networking with other Fellows. When you take a gap year, you’re joining a group of young people with aspirations and goals similar to your own.

 

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Sources:
US News and World Report: http://money.usnews.com/money/blogs/outside-voices-careers/2011/11/30/community-service-work-increasingly-important-for-college-applicants

Washington Post: http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/parenting/wp/2015/06/23/want-to-help-kids-succeed-in-college-let-them-take-a-gap-year

Wired: www.wired.com/2011/03/what-is-success-true-grit

Why Take A Gap Year

How a Gap Year Can Make Students Successful

Based on the article by Margaret Loftus

 

Long a rite of passage for affluent Brits, a gap year spent traveling, volunteering or working between high school and college is now really catching on among U.S. students.

A survey by the American Gap Association, a nonprofit that accredits companies that coordinate these stints, found that enrollment in respondents’ programs climbed 27 percent from 2012 to 2013.

Many students handle their own planning and logistics. But there’s a whole industry bidding for gap-year business, from the Pioneer Project, through which students learn skills like beekeeping and blacksmithing on a North Carolina farm, to Art History Abroad, which offers six-week courses in Italy.

 

Even colleges, including Tufts University, Princeton University and the University of North Carolina—Chapel Hill, have developed service-based gap-year offerings.

 

“We aren’t creating demand,” says Alan Solomont, dean of Tufts’ Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service. “We’re responding to appetite.”

Burnout is one of the top reasons students take a break, according to an independent study of 280 gap-year participants by education policy experts Karl Haigler and Rae Nelson, authors of “Gap Year, American Style: Journeys Toward Learning, Serving, and Self-Discovery.” Subjects in the Haigler and Nelson study also cited a desire to find out more about themselves.

Kim Oppelt, a former school counselor, now community relations manager at education solutions provider Hobsons in Arlington, Virginia, says high school students used to have the time to sample a variety of electives, but they’re “now under pressure to take advanced courses in every subject for all four years of high school. This gives them little time to explore their true interests.”

 

And families increasingly “are looking for value. They’re thinking, ‘if I’m spending this much on college, I want every year to count,'” says AGA Executive Director Ethan Knight.

Recent Cornell University grad Wes Cornell says his year doing scientific research shaped his academic focus. In Costa Rica, he researched the health care of workers at coffee farms through Duke University’s Organization for Tropical Studies and did a program on sustainable development and tropical ecology with an environmental study abroad organization. He interned with the Colombia Nature Conservancy in Cartagena, and researched viral pathways at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel.

At Cornell, where he studied ecology and agriculture policy, he noticed classmates struggling to find themselves. “Having had time off, I was able to figure out what really interested me,” he says.

Research has shown that “gappers” perform better in school than their peers. A 2011 study at Middlebury College conducted by its former dean of admissions Robert Clagett found that students who had taken a year off had consistently higher GPAs than those who didn’t. “A lot of our students say when they enter as freshman that they have a greater sense of purpose in their studies,” says Princeton’s Bridge Year Director John Luria.

One goal of AGA is to make aid available to students to use for gap years so the experience isn’t available only to the affluent. But gap years don’t have to cost a fortune.

[Find scholarships to help defray the cost of a gap year.]

Programs sponsored by colleges typically cover part or most of the expense. At UNC, participants in the Global Gap Year Fellowship are granted $7,500 to develop their own six-month service experience. Princeton’s Bridge Year is a nine-month tuition-free program that places small groups at sites in five countries – Brazil, China, India, Peru and Senegal – to do service projects.

 

Kicking off in the fall of 2015, Tufts’ 1+4 program is aimed at democratizing the gap experience. “When we looked at our own data in terms of students who have deferred admission to take a gap year on their own, they are disproportionately self-paying,” says Solomont. “We want to make sure students who need financial assistance aren’t precluded, so we’ll provide aid.”

The program will place participants in service organizations domestically and internationally.

Counselors typically encourage students weighing a year off to apply to college anyway, and defer acceptance if they decide to go for it.

On the other hand, “it may be the case that waiting to apply during the gap year could improve your chances of getting in the school of your choice,” says Haigler, who once worked as a college counselor. “You might also find a school that is more suited to your evolving interest, the skills and knowledge you develop and what you learn about yourself.”

[Learn how to use college savings for a gap year.]

Experts recommend that students talk to college counselors and someone who works in the field they may be interested in to develop a plan. Macon Bianucci of Charleston, South Carolina, had a very clear idea of her goals when she deferred her start at Northwestern University a year ago to work with wildlife in Africa.

She combined three stints: a field guide course outside of Kruger National Park in South Africa, where she trained to become a safari guide; an internship at a safari company in Tanzania; and an internship at Victoria Falls Wildlife Trust in Zimbabwe.

 

Her experiences strengthened her desire to major in environmental science. And she’s really looking forward to school.

 

To further give information about the Gap year, here’s a video from Wall Street Jornal about the pros and cons of Gap year. Enjoy!

 

Source: https://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/articles/2014/09/23/how-a-gap-year-can-make-students-successful

 

-lozanes

 

Advantages and Disadvantages of Gap Year

Image result for gap year pictures

Many students are taking gap year as one of their option to regroup and think things through in terms of their future, whilst this might not be an option for some. Some take it because they want to earn money for their studies, or get work experience, or volunteer or travel the world before gearing up for varsity life, but gap years aren’t for everyone and you need to think carefully about the upsides and downsides before making a decision.

Here are some advantages and disadvantages to help you decide what is best for you in terms of postponing university and taking a year off.

Image result for gap year pictures

Advantages

  • A chance to mature before entering university
  • Image result for gap year pictures – in secondary school,  you probably leaned a fair bit about how to be a good student. On 
  • the other hand, you likely learned very little about life experience. Gap years can provide students the chance to learn responsibility on a different level. Whether you’re planning a trip around the world or working as a store manager, you’re going to
  •  be fending for yourself as an adult for the first ti
    me. The experiences you gain can make you better prepared for  university, both academically and socially
  • It’s probably the longest ‘holiday’ you will ever be able to take in your life – taking long breaks will be harder once your career starts
  • An opportunity to regroup – Secondary school can be a very stressful time for students. Between preparing for university academically and searching for the right post-secondary institution(s), many students feel pretty beaten up by the time they graduate. Changing course and doing something besides school for awhile can be a much-needed break psychologically
  • Money Issues – It’s no secret how expensive funding a university education can be. Depending on what you do during your year off, you can use some or all of the time to earn money for university, taking the pressure of your finances
  • You can learn new skills
  • You get the chance to experience life away f
  • Image result for gap year picturesrom home before starting university
  • Volunteering gives you the opportunity to help people
  • Both volunteering and working will provide valuable work experience
  • If you’re feeling dedicated, you can get ahead on preparations for your course
  • If you didn’t get the grades in one of your A-levels, you can retake it and reapply while using the rest of your time to do something else

Disadvantages

  • Losing momentum – For some students, a year off can be a refreshing break that helps you get into the swing of things in university. However, it also takes you away from the classroom experience, so you might be a bit rusty when you return.
  • If you want to travel or take part in an organized gap year programme, it could be expensive
  • There may be changes to your course or your student finance package during your Image result for disadvantages of not going to schoolyear off
  • If your friends from home are all going to university, your social life could dry up
  • Unless you revise, you can forget a lot in a year that would be useful to your course
  • If you’ve got a university offer and haven’t already agreed to defer your place, you could be putting your place at risk
  • If you don’t get organised, you may end up spending your gap doing nothing but watching TV. Not great for the CV!

source: http://www.youthvillage.co.za/2014/01/advantages-disadvantages-taking-gap-year/