Found this on wiki - Interesting, not saying it makes me HAVE TO GET THE $$ SO SHE CAN GO, but interesing...
History
Eisenhower with the People to People committee in 1960.In 1956, President Dwight D. Eisenhower sought an alternative to the wars he witnessed as a soldier, general and Allied Commander. He called a White House conference of 100 of the top American leaders who joined him in creating the People to People initiative. One of the participants in this conference was Walt Disney, who became one of the founding directors of People to People and later drew inspiration from the People to People initiative to create the "It's a Small World" attraction in 1964
DD has got these letters for years and we chunk them in the trash.
I do remember a death of a student on a trip. Here, found this:
http://www.consumeraffairs.com/news04/2008/01/p2p_hill.html
http://www.tylerhill.org/index.php/Left/Tylers-Story.html
I would not allow my 10 yr old to travel overseas with strangers. I would much rather take my own kids on these experiences.
We were/are very proud when dd was nominated for this program as only 1 other was from her grade. Congrats to your dd and if she goes, Im sure she will have a great time.
fyi...like pp said, there is a thread covering this topic that was pretty recent.
Hi, I went with People to People to Brazil many years ago, I was 14 years old then, I believe. It was a really great, life-changing experience for me. I got the opportunity in high school to go on a couple different academic trips and the People to People trip prepared me for that. I was able to gain a lot of independence and believe it or not I still keep in touch with some friends that I made on that trip to this day. It's a great opportunity to learn about another culture and I'm sure your DD would really benefit from it. The program is very reputable and the adults who go along on the trip (we had 4 for about 40 students) are all teachers and they have done this many times before. You will also have someone from the country you are visiting travel with you the whole trip and he or she will help organize everything. The whole trip is very scheduled and structured. Also, I did a lot of fund raising for my trip. The cost of mine was only about $4000, I'm pretty sure, but my big fundraiser was that I held a raffle with donations I received from many local businesses. You can also write to corporations and ask if they will sponsor some of the cost.
Hope this helped, feel free to PM me if you have any questions![]()
If you don't have the money, I would not consider it.
So you mean to tell me that if your child was given an opportunity to be a student ambassador, and something like this would look great on a college application, that you wouldn't give the whole sponsor thing a try? I'm not trying to go with her, I'm not trying to take a free trip to WDW, I'm trying to see if there's a possibility where my child could experience something that a lot of children don't. She works hard in school, she even got a scholarship to a private school this year and I don't see why I can't consider it.
It's not just about traveling the world, but immersing with other students of a different culture. Besides, it's not just a family trip, but a trip with other educators and leaders and you're there to learn.
I am not saying it is not a great learning experience. I am saying that if I did not have the money, my child would not be going for a 7000 trip.
That is outrageous.
Sure a trip to Australia would be an awesome experience. But on YOUR dime, and even if your kid goes, you shouldn't put it on your college application.
The other educators and leaders in my DN's case turned out to be 29 yo with more body piercings and tattoos then my DSis could stomach (and she is not opposed to tats). She was the oldest educator/leader. All the others were younger. Really, check into it. If you're still convinced it's a great program then start asking your friends and relatives to pay for it. It's your choice, not ours.
You don't have to be "nominated", anyone can apply even if they weren't nominated.
People to People has been investigated in the past for using mailing lists for their nominations. They sent a "Congratulations, you've been nominated based on your excellent achievements" letter to the name of a child who died in infancy. After that they were supposed to fix their marketing practices. You can google for further info if you like.
I do know kids who went on PTP trips, and they enjoyed them. But I don't like that the company presents it as a big honor when it isn't. I also don't like the whole sponsorship/begging aspect.
I found my folder with all the papers and stuff from PTP. I found the h.s. transferable credits...
It could be different with each trip location, but the trip to D.C. earns these h.s. credits..
1 elective trimester course equivalent to 55 classroom hrs. for Social Studies, American History/Government
In addition to the h.s. credit, all students receiving a passing evaluation from their facilitators will earn 10 service learning hours for Service learning/volunteerism. (this whole trip and meetings that dd was involved in, she was graded and received a certificate at the end. If you passed the "class", you receive these credits towards h.s.)
It's not a unique opportunity and the colleges know that.
exactly
My oldest has been on two People to People trips because we had the money (and she is incredibly spoiled), but it didn't help her get into college. No way did we try to get "sponsors" that would have seemed like begging to me.
Honestly I don't know how much she "learned". She had a blast, she went to the UK and also Australia, and the only thing she learned was how much she loves to travel to expensive places!![]()
Yep...
yep again.
That's scary...when my DD went her leaders were respectable high school teachers.