Travel Schooling

In 2013, after four years of homework supervision in traditional school from home, I met a couple of families who travelled full-time to take their learning to the streets and was intrigued by the idea. In fact, we were so intrigued that within a few months we sold our house and started travelling full time ourselves. [Sources: 4]

A growing number of families are educating their children to travel full-time around the world, save for a family gap year, work as digital nomads, or run an online business, and travel more cheaply than long-term housesitting. Traveling allows families to spend more time immersing themselves in new experiences. There is no single way to do world education, but there are a few things to consider. [Sources: 0]

World education, Edwardian life, learning – whatever you call it, more parents are doing it, and there’s a proliferation of blogs and books about how families are coping on world trips. Driven by the desire to spend more time with their children, escape the pressures of work and discover new cultures and lifestyles, parents are tackling what is needed to get their children out of school and experience adventure. In our minds, these families learn in an interesting way. [Sources: 1]

Local authority figures published at the end of last year show that the number of children being taught at home in Britain has risen by 65% in just six years. For many travelling families, going to school is not a consequence of travelling, but part of the attraction. On the US website VagabondFamily.org, more than 100 nomadic families are featured in a series of posts about the benefits of street education, while Daniel Prince, who has been traveling with LoveHomesWap.com for two years, talks about the inspiration for home schooling and the resources he and his wife use to raise their four children. [Sources: 1]

Some families with a global education send their children to school on trips. That is their choice, and you can see why: some parents want full linguistic immersion so that their children become bilingual. A world student does not go to school (non-negotiable) if one is not with them, not even on weekends. They are bound to a timetable and curriculum, do not have enough time to experience their surroundings and follow an educational path of their choice. [Sources: 6]

Many families want to include formal education courses and studies in their world school plans. There is no doubt that a primary school curriculum for world students should be a multitude of experiences with which they can travel. Choose a curriculum for home schooling that fits your school goals. [Sources: 3]

There are several considerations to consider when choosing the best curriculum for families travelling the world. It is important to choose a curriculum that allows you to combine what you learn while traveling with the core courses that your private student needs. The ability to afford a world-class education depends on the plan. [Sources: 3]

You may have heard of it as a travel school, world school, street school, or if you’ve been doing homework for a while, you’ve probably heard of a family doing it. Some define it as travel homework, taking their books wherever they want to go and what they see as a way to complement their learning, while others define it by letting their travels determine their curriculum for years in places where leadership aspirations and ecological learning collide. However it is defined, it relies on the freedom, which is one of the greatest perks of being educated at home. [Sources: 4]

The years on the road are not long enough to find your way to education, which is one of the reasons why I advise parents to take their children on short school trips. Do not spoil the experience, but enjoy it and learn. Worldschooling is a kind of home education, but with a good level of travel and active learning. By participating in this process, or seeking places to learn, as an educator, parent or pupil, it is by no means a passive absorption process. [Sources: 6]

Don’t get bogged down in your own timetable and don’t let any valuable learning experience pass you by. Grab hold of it and pack it, and before you know it, you will experience more travel school adventures than you ever thought possible. [Sources: 4]

I say this not to boast about it, but as proof that world school does not paralyze its success for adult students. I have taken the opportunity to guide and mentor travelling teenagers around the world, and I am thinking of entering the gap year industry as a travel guide. I am good friends with most of the teenagers I meet on the road and have a long-term relationship with one of them. [Sources: 2]

Feel free to ask me a question if you have one. The good news for me is that there is a whole section about what to expect from the World School. If you are like me, I strongly recommend reading the last sections of my blog to see where my life has taken me along this path. So I went to university after school. [Sources: 2]

Brief note before you dive in: This article was written in 2013, when my teenage self told strangers who were out with my family how messed up my whole life had been. I went to world school most of my life. School on the street, textbooks everywhere and no textbooks at all. [Sources: 2]

That’s not to say that clumsy efforts in the classroom are not met with thousands of rolls of the eye by the age of seven or nine. But at this age, I think it’s important for them to experience the place and remember the facts. I keep school work separate and travel part of the fun. Many parents link their lesson plans with knowledge of the goals they are attending. [Sources: 5]

Along the way, we visited family and friends and made our world tour affordable and enjoyable by meeting friends and family. I had friends all over the world and it was fun to visit them because it changed my perspective on the destination. I never intended to stay in the UAE for two weeks, but one of my old friends lived there with her husband and her twin children, and we did. [Sources: 5]

As a result, Dubai is one of my children’s favourite places. Not only is it filled with endless amusement centres, but it is also something I can enjoy with my friends and children. It is a short interlude from life on the street that conveys a real sense of home. [Sources: 5]

The possibilities are endless, and there are many lists of digital books to ease the burden on the go. Below are links to recommended curricula, online resources and games for each subject. This is just a sample of those that have crossed my path, most of which involve fees. For each resource, the letter in the resource indicates the general level of education. [Sources: 7]

Homeschooling involves subject-related learning, with most of the core knowledge in science, mathematics, history, geography and language. The type and quantity of the curriculum vary by family. Local homeschoolers can join cooperatives that are interested in a subject each year in addition to their school work. [Sources: 7]

Sources:

[0]: https://www.treehugger.com/worldschooling-educating-kids-by-traveling-world-4853540

[1]: https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2016/jan/29/is-world-schooling-kids-selfish-family-travel-edventures

[2]: http://www.edventuregirl.com/10-ways-world-schooling-has-ruined-my-childhood/

[3]: https://www.time4learning.com/homeschooling-styles/worldschooling.html

[4]: https://www.homeschool.com/what-is-travel-schooling-homeschooling

[5]: https://www.afar.com/magazine/how-to-take-your-kids-out-of-school-and-travel

[6]: https://worldtravelfamily.com/worldschooling/

[7]: https://alittleadrift.com/homeschooling/

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