STUDENT TRAVEL

How Travel Helps You Become the Teacher You Always Wanted to Be 

Dylan Maloney | May 1, 2025

You didn’t become a teacher to race through the curriculum or prep students for tests. You became a teacher to open minds and change lives.

But inside the classroom, there’s only so much room for transformation. Educational travel for teachers like you can change that. How exactly? Well...

Confidence blooms in the real world

Students take on challenges they never imagined they could—even something as small as ordering food in another language can feel like a big step. Sarah, a teacher from Nova Scotia, puts it perfectly:

"I love seeing students conquer their fears—like navigating an airport or a subway—and then turn to me and say, 'That’s okay, I’ve got it now.'"

Every attempt at something new, no matter how small, builds real confidence—the kind that travels home with them and shapes how they approach not just school, but their entire life. That’s educational travel’s impact on students.

Independence becomes second nature

Students solve problems, make decisions, and take ownership of their experiences—without relying on teachers or parents to lead the way. Just like Rylee, a student from Manitoba, continues to do to this day:

“Before my tour, my outlook on myself centred heavily on academic validation and other people’s opinions. When I started travelling though, I came to see that I was a confident, capable, self-reliant person—travel helped me shake the need to impress other people.”

One of the biggest benefits of students travel is letting the world teach them for a change.

You rediscover the wonder of learning

Travel reminds students, and teachers, that learning isn’t just memorizing facts—
it’s discovery. Connection. Wonder.

France, from Québec, captures it best when she recalls a quiet moment at the Reina Sofía Museum:

"I remember one student standing in front of a painting, turning to me with tears in her eyes and saying: 'I see what you mean now.'"

You set off a ripple effect

Travel doesn’t just change students in the moment. The confidence, resilience, and broader worldview they gain lasts far beyond the trip itself.

When you show your students the world, you’re not just changing their environment, you’re changing their future—and fulfilling what drew you to teaching in the first place.

The classroom has limits. Your impact doesn’t.

Travel opens the door to the kind of growth you always wanted for them—and the kind of teacher you always dreamed of becoming.

Ready to show your students the world—and grow alongside them?

Leading a tour can change their lives—and yours.