Every year, most international schools participate in a “Week Without Walls” experience. For some schools, that includes local camping trips, or local community service oriented trips. Other schools offer international trips to students as a way to experience the cultures of new places and to engage in community service in a host country. On this blog, I have highlighted past Week Without Walls trips that I have had that featured camping at 15,000 feet on the edge of a volcano, getting lost in a jungle, and building houses in the Philippines. The programs are wonderful, fulfilling for students, and usually quite enjoyable for the supervising teachers as well.
When the time came this year for volunteers to offer supervision on specific trips, I was chosen to help chaperone a trip to Thailand. As the weeks passed, our trip itinerary was built up and our tickets booked. Then the Corona Virus hit. As it continued to spread, our school, to their credit, did their due diligence and kept in contact with the local embassy, other international schools, and kept up to date on World Health Organization recommendations. Ultimately, our school decided to cancel all of our trips we had planned to Thailand, Cambodia, and Nepal.
Our students were disappointed, but the inability for the international community to get this virus under control makes it a decision of caution. Our school rightfully, didn’t want to get stuck in a situation where we were exposing students (and teacher chaperones) to any heightened level of risk by traveling through airports and other bustling locations with many travelers. While disappointing to me and to our school as a whole, it was the right call. It was also a nice wake up call. People tend to think of their own perspectives from the scope and context of their own experiences. If they aren’t in a position to face an international crisis, it’s easy to put it from the forefront of their mind. Whether those events are earthquakes in South America, Tsunamis in the Pacific Islands, or a sweeping virus. But being faced with the realities of those situations forces us to confront those problems, or at least acknowledge them, in ways that go beyond simple awareness in a news feed.
Now I am spending my week driving around Riyadh, checking in on students as they intern at various local and international businesses. For many of them, they were forced to forego their trips to various countries, only to be thrust into the workforce for the week. But regardless, I think the learning that they will take with them from this week will benefit them greatly in the long run.
Now here's to hoping that we don't have some other weird obstacles to overcome before our spring break trip we have planned...
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