| country: | Guatemala |
| departures: | Departures can be arranged anytime throughout the year |
| price: | From £675 (2 weeks) - £1425 (12 weeks) excluding flights. Extra weeks are £95 per week |
| vouchers: | Gift vouchers can be used with this holiday |
the amazing things you'll be doing
In Guatemala you can teach conversational English, Music, Drama, Maths, and more, to children and adults. The schools are very colourful and often classes take place outdoors. Most of the schools we work with are based in the beautiful small city of Antigua, but some are in pueblos on the edge of the city. The city itself is only about 2 kilometres long! The schools we work with range from small to larger, and from poor to not-so-poor. Some have delightful names, like the Snoopy School. In some schools teaching can also take place inside or outside or, in some cases, in classrooms that are semi-external, like the Centivo Educativo.
You don't need any qualifications to take part in a teaching placement in Guatemala. These are flexible programmes, tailored to suit you. Facilities in the different schools can vary, but generally most schools have a library, video and cassette recorder facilities. Some schools also have computers and some have sports facilities. On average, class sizes range from 8 to 15 pupils, with ages from 6 upwards. The children's levels of English could be anything from beginner through to reasonably advanced.
Some of the subjects over and above English that you'll be able to teach (if you choose to) include:
You don't need any qualifications to take part in a teaching placement in Guatemala. These are flexible programmes, tailored to suit you. Facilities in the different schools can vary, but generally most schools have a library, video and cassette recorder facilities. Some schools also have computers and some have sports facilities. On average, class sizes range from 8 to 15 pupils, with ages from 6 upwards. The children's levels of English could be anything from beginner through to reasonably advanced.
Some of the subjects over and above English that you'll be able to teach (if you choose to) include:
- Sports (mostly football or basketball)
- Music
- Drama
- Maths
- Arts
- Science
a day in the life of a volunteer
Hours of teaching will most probably be around 4-5 per day. It is possible that some classes you teach will be throughout the day and sometimes mostly in the mornings and between 4 and 7 o'clock in the afternoons. Class periods are generally 45 minutes long. In some schools you will act as assistant to the teacher and once your confidence and ability have grown, you'll be allowed to take classes on your own. In some classes you'll handle children on a one-to-one basis to give them individual attention and help, and in others you'll take small groups of children. accommodation
Your accommodation will most likely be living with local families and this enables you to really become totally immersed in the local culture and gain insights into the way of life from the inside. Some families are able to take more than one volunteer at a time, so it's possible that you may be placed together with other volunteers. Food will be provided and will consist mostly of local dishes. One of the most enjoyable aspects of living and working in a foreign country and culture is to enjoy the local cuisine, and in Central America the food is very interesting and sometimes quite exotic. volunteer travel - what's it all about?
Are you looking for an adventurous trip with a purpose, or on a gap year or career break? If you want to make a difference in some of the world’s most important conservation areas - and in community projects - then volunteer trips are for you! Volunteers tend to have a sense of adventure, and come from a range of different backgrounds and from all over the world. Edward Abbey said 'sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul'.
how this holiday makes a difference
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The project:
This project aims to work alongside the local people in Guatemala to provide assistance without leaving a negative footprint on the community. We employ local staff to co-ordinate arrangements for your program, and we use local transport and accommodation services at all times. You will stay in a host family in Antigua, who are paid fairly for the time you are with them, including a fee to provide you with locally sourced and traditional food during your project time. This enables you not only to give valuable revenue to the real people of the community, but for you to learn about Guatemalan culture from the inside and experience their true way of life. We encourage all volunteers to learn Spanish while on their placements and provide Spanish lessons on request, to enable further integration into the community. You will be briefed in detail about culturally sensitive subjects before departure and on arrival in order to make sure you are familiar with and can follow local customs. We also lay down guidelines on energy usage, the best places to spend money and the many ways which you can reduce your negative impact on the community during your stay. The project aims, in all ways, to leave only a positive footprint on the local community. Our company: You taking part in this project enables us to continue to donate financial assistance as well as necessary goods, where it is needed around the world. Examples of donations include building new classrooms, providing school uniforms for poorer students, buying computers, sports equipment, playgrounds, toys, mattresses, classroom equipment and funding school trips and the building of libraries, and more. We also donate significantly to conservation research efforts and the purchasing of necessary conservation equipment. In the past, these donations have been made in all continents and in projects where we work, and some where we do not work. Recent donations made in Summer 2008 include:
We are committed to upholding strict ethical standards that ensure a positive and lasting impact upon the environments, communities, institutions, volunteers, animals, children and people that we work with. For example:
Our projects enable vital conservation, research, care and education work to take place directly where it is most needed. For example, the schools where we teach English very often have no other English teachers, and so they rely on us for continued lessons. We kept a Species Survival Conservation project in South Africa afloat until completion after it was threatened by lack of funds. Our volunteers contribute, all over the world, to projects that would not exist without them. |
Tourism can be good and bad for destinations & local people. We carefully screen every holiday against our criteria for responsible travel. 'Look behind the brochure' to find how each holiday makes a difference (see left). We don't claim to be perfect - there is no global accreditation - but we've led the way since 2001 and screened 1000's of holidays. We invite every traveller to write a review about their experiences and responsible tourism. This valuable feedback is sent to the people who run the holidays. We keep a very close eye on it and take off holidays that don't live up to our standards. |








