Tuesday, 28 January 2014

Xplore High School in Malta

In January, the German High School department went for a trip to Malta to visit students, schools and our partner. The 5 day trip was especially nice because of the temperature – while the temperatures in Germany dropped close to 0°C, Malta welcomed us with lovely 16°C!

Even though it wasn’t a holiday trip we really got the best out of it.  We flew in from three different locations – Hamburg, Berlin and Cologne. Wednesday night, the time of our arrival, we had a lovely dinner with our partner.  On Thursday morning we started with school visits straight away.  Our first school to visit was St. Dorothy’s High School in Zebbug where we meet our students Svenja, Ida, Anna and Kathleen. After a tour through the school we had the chance to chat with the girls.

Afterwards we went to the English Language Institute our partner uses to teach English to short term students. During an information session we listened to the development of the school system in Malta and how the English language became a big part of Maltese culture.

We enjoyed a quick snack in the Institute’s garden and sat down to meet with the Malta High School team to discuss the progress of the current programme and where we see chances to improve the experience of our students who we send over.

At around 3pm we began a trekking tour with students of the Language School that lasted until sundown. After a quick stop at our hostel we went on another tour through Rabat and Mdina for a couple of hours and sat down with our partners for dinner in a lovely restaurant in Mdina.

The next morning we started to visit schools to see our other students. First we went to Birkirkara to meet Florian and Katharina at St. Aloysius School. Afterwards we went to St. Edward’s Senior High School in Birgu to see Benja, Saba and Hetty. After Lunch and a bit of sightseeing in Valletta we had the afternoon off.  

On Saturday, our last full day on Malta, we went to Gozo, the second biggest island in the Republic of Malta.  Our guide and bus driver showed us around the island and we saw a lot of attractions!

 On Sunday we had to leave at 5am and were back in Germany in time for lunch, but we look forward to our next visit to this beautiful island!




Thursday, 16 January 2014

Sarah Jane's Travels Part 1!


Here in Ashville, North Carolina, I have one of the coolest careers around...



Hey Ya'll!  I'm getting used to saying that, "ya'll" now that I've lived in North Carolina for 7 years. It really is convenient!  Who wants to say, "Hey you all, or guys or…(insert less cool name for group here)…So, ya'll, I'm Sarah Jane, nice southern name. But I grew up in California, on the beautiful central coast, and I never thought I'd end up in the Appalachian Mountains.  Luckily it is great out here! I've really come to dig it!

Here in Asheville North Carolina, I have one of the coolest careers around.  I get to invite hundreds of international students to our beautiful mountain town each summer! I'm the Program Manager for all short term trips to the USA here at Xplore.  I'm really attached to our summer programs, and our summer students because I get to make it all happen, start to finish.

Running international summer camps is a perfect fit for me.  It's a natural extension from my own travels as a student….I want to take you on a trip so you can see where my passion came from!

France
I spent a year studying in Toulouse, France back when I was a university student.  My arrival was hilarious. The study abroad program had an incorrect email for me, so we hadn't been in contact all summer.  Oddly, that I didn't seem to think that was a problem. I just booked my ticket and went over there blind. I found my way to the school the day after I arrived, only to find it closed, not to open for another month! Oops!  A janitor let me in to an office where he helped me find a contact number of someone in charge of the international students. The coordinator and I spoke and she was shocked I was there! She had assumed I wasn't coming since no one had heard from me. I got myself an apartment and enrolled in school and had one of the best years of my life. 

India
I left America in May time. I was going around the world technically, though I really only had a few destinations.  After visiting friends in Europe I landed early morning in the hot, smokey, smelly air of New Delhi.  I was meeting a friend there and we had four months to travel around India, getting off the tourist track by volunteering our skills on organic farms.  Maybe some of you have heard of the organization WWOOF?  Well in some countries WWOOFing is quite established, in India at the time, there wasn't much structure, you just contacted the farmers and asked if you could come help out. We ended up working at some really interesting places and got to meet lots of families who really gave us an interesting perspective of rural India. 

Thats me one day off. We hiked to a waterfall where lots of locals went for a swim. This little girl was helping her mom peel corn, to cook and sell to the tourists. I helped her out for a bit.  A little view of my travel style: I'm the type who'd rather shuck the corn with someone than just buy it from them.  I like to get involved.

My friend had an unexpected family tragedy and had to leave me. I had about 2 months left and I was going it alone. I can't say that didn't rock me a little. India isn't the easiest place to travel alone as a western woman. Or any woman most likely.  I went south where I worked on a reforestation project and made some life long friends.

Thailand
I left India in late August. It was so hot there, but I wasn't going anywhere cooler.  I was off to Thailand.  I met up with my cousin there, to do some more volunteer work and get to know the locals.

Here I am taking down the fast growing weeds around baby papaya trees.  I'm a huge fan of tropical fruit. On this farm there were jackfruit trees, papaya, mango and banana.  Heavenly!  This farm was close by a school. The children were really too young to learn much English from us, but we were invited all the same to give them some lessons. We taught the ABC's with some songs and pretty charts we made, and we also took some Polaroid pictures so we could leave them with the teachers.

See how young they are? It was really cute. This was my first classroom teaching experience. Not to be forgotten.

I spent another 4 weeks in Thailand by myself, volunteering with an environmental group that built mud brick homes. That was very educational, and got me thinking about the types of projects I might want to start elsewhere….

Bringing it Full Circle
My travels have brought me all over the world and in each place I sought out intercultural interaction. Go figure that I now make intercultural opportunities possible for others!  I've stayed with host families in Spain, Morocco, India, Thailand, France, and Turkey too.  All were such formative experiences!  


For Xplore USA I meet some of Asheville's most interesting and fun loving families and pair them up with outgoing teens from Europe, sparking some amazing friendships and unforgettable experiences.   


In North Carolina, Florida, California, Washington and I'm sure more places in the future, I set up camps for international students to enjoy their summer vacation while making new friends from different cultures, and learning about America.  Most of our programs include English lessons too, but they all include intercultural interaction, whether it's through a service learning project with a community organization, through American teens participating in the programming, or with tours of community services like schools, police departments or fire stations.



I'm so glad to be apart of something so valuable to today's bright young minds. Hooray for international education!

Monday, 6 January 2014

Up a mountain, out at sea...

We rarely see our Training and Development Manager sitting still!  Paul is relatively new to the Xplore family but with his passion for the outdoors and voluntary work he is already a much loved member of the UK Head Office team!  Here, he tells us about a few of the things he loves to do. 

'Where do I start……having worked in outdoor education and the travel industry for nearly 10 years I’ve had the pleasure of living all over the UK from the Lake District down to the Isle of Wight.  Working in the industry also gave me the opportunity to manage a chateau in Northern France for a few years which was an excellent cultural experience and learning curve! 

One of my most exciting and moving travel experiences was Croatia in 1998 with the Venture Scouts.  We took a lorry loaded with aid and worked at an orphanage for three weeks.  Getting to know the children, who were around the same age as me, really put the teenage struggle of a young Mancunian boy in perspective as I learnt about their different and challenging lives.  We spent our time socialising and playing with them, we went fishing and did soap carving but mostly we just showed them that someone from outside their country was aware of their circumstances.

Nowadays I enjoy playing on mountains as everyone in the industry does and I try to get to them as much as possible.  I have a memory of being 11 years old and traversing Striding Edge in the Lake District in high wind! Another challenging time was the assent of The Old Man of Coniston where conditions changed and we were too close to the top to back down. Lots of people came down past us and we had to crawl the last 100m, we then ran back down! 


Another fun travel experience was a little shorter and was my first trip on the Sheringham Lifeboat I’m currently crew on, only a short (and fast) trip but travel all the same.  There are two things that keep me going to training and make sure I have my pager on me when I go out, the first is the immense sense of internal pride I get from volunteering for an organisation like the RNLI and the boat is pretty quick so hitting the waves on it is immense fun!

Aside from life boats and mountains, I travelled to Martinique last year, just to relax! Most of the year I use a 5mm winter wetsuit to play in the waves or my RNLI dry suit, neither of which were needed in Martinique… warm water and big waves!  I had coconut sorbet served in a little kart which is made by the locals from the coconuts on that beach. I also watched the start of a boat race between Martinique and St.Lucia in traditional boats.'

So where next for Paul? He says in 2014 I would like to climb Mt Elbrus, a 5,642 metre mountain in Russia... We'll keep you posted!