STUDENT TRAVEL

5 Signs It’s Time to Reset Your Classroom with the Power of Travel

Dylan Maloney | May 1, 2025

Let’s be honest—teaching’s been a lot lately. You’re not just tired. You’re drained.
 And your students feel it too. The truth? You don’t need to keep pushing through. Sometimes, a reset is what brings you and your class back to life.

Travel isn’t just a reward. It’s a breakthrough.
Here are five signs it might be time to reset your classroom—and how travel helps you do it.

1. The grind has taken over

When even the small things—lesson planning, grading, answering questions—feel exhausting, it’s a sign you’re running on fumes. Students feel it too: disengagement and low energy can be quiet calls for change.


How travel helps: 


New experiences bring excitement. Small wins on tour—like navigating a new city or trying a new, local food—restore more energy than what goes into them. 

2. Curiosity has flatlined

If lessons that used to spark excitement now fall flat, or if students seem checked out no matter how creative you get, it might not be the material.

How travel helps: 


History feels alive when you’re standing where it happened. Language feels relevant & exciting when it’s the only way to order lunch. Our brains love novelty—and the further from routine you get, the newer the world feels.

3. Confidence has escaped

When stressors pile up, even the most capable teachers and students start doubting themselves.

How travel helps: 


Just by going on a class trip, you and your students already believe that you’ll figure out how to thrive together there. Maybe it’s conquering a fear of heights, trying new foods, or striking up conversations with new people. Challenges become something to lean into—with more courage, curiosity, and self-trust.

4. Connection feels thin

When everyone’s caught up in packed routines and a fast-moving culture, it’s easy to lose the deep connections that make learning meaningful. Students start to feel like faces in rows. Teachers start to feel alone.

How travel helps: 


There’s space for real connection. Shared experiences—laughing on a bus, reflecting at a historic site, cheering each other on in a scavenger hunt—build deeper bonds that you bring back home.

"It’s impossible to spend almost every waking moment with your students over the course of a tour without developing deeper connections with them. Whether we were strolling down the Champs-Élysées, driving through the Tuscan countryside, or simply sharing a snack in the ruins of Delphi, we could have real conversations.”  
—Patricia M., teacher from Halifax

5. Your “why” feels far away

It’s easy to lose sight of what led you to teaching. Students feel it too: a sense of drifting, wondering what they’re working toward.

How travel helps: 


Stepping outside the classroom reminds both teachers and students that learning isn’t about checking boxes—it’s about expanding horizons, dreaming bigger, and believing in possibilities again.

Travel doesn’t just get you out of the classroom—it gets you back to why you started.

When you reset together, you don’t just make it through the school year. You change it.

Reset student engagement through travel

Leading a tour can change their lives—and yours.