Gap year

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In the professional or career world, a gap year is a year before going to college or University and after finishing high school or taking a year off before going into graduate school after completing a bachelor as an undergraduate. It is also known as a sabbatical year. During this time students may engage in advanced academic courses, extra-academic courses and non-academic courses, such as yearlong pre-college math courses, language studies, learning a trade, art studies, volunteer work, travel, internships, sports and more.

Gap years are sometimes urged as a way for students to become independent and learn a great deal of responsibility prior to engaging in university life.[1]

History

In 1967, Nicholas Maclean-Bristol set up the educational volunteering charity Project Trust and sent three volunteers to Addis Ababa in Ethiopia.

In 1972, Gap Activity Projects was founded in the UK and later renamed Lattitude Global Volunteering in 2008.

In 1973, Graham "Skroo" Turner set up the company Topdeck, one of the first tour operators.

In 1978, the Prince of Wales and Colonel John Blashford-Snell began what is now known as Raleigh International by launching Operation Drake, an expedition voyage around the world following Sir Francis Drake's route.

In the United States, the deferred year idea was promoted by Cornelius H. Bull, in 1980.[2]

In 2010, taking a deferred year increased among school, college and university leavers, as this is seen as an option for future career development.[3]

By country

Australia and New Zealand

Aussies and New Zealanders have a tradition of travelling overseas independently at a young age, and this is known as "doing an OE" (overseas experience). Sometimes an OE is limited to one year, but more often Aussies and New Zealanders will remain overseas for three to five years, with many working short-term in service industry jobs to fund their continuing travels. Europe and Asia are popular destinations for doing an OE.

The concept of the OE is so ingrained in the New Zealand psyche that the national tax department devotes a section of its website telling people doing their OEs how it will contribute to the country.

Belgium

The Time Credit system in Belgium entitles employees of one year per lifetime of absence from their job, in order to prevent burn-out and to provide an opportunity to pursue other important things in life.[4]

Denmark

Denmark has sought to limit the number of students who take a year out, penalising students who delay their education to travel abroad or work full-time.[5] In 2006, it was announced that fewer students than before had taken a year out.[6] In April 2009, the Danish government proposed a new law which gives a bonus to students who refrain from a year out.[7]

Ghana

In Ghana, most Senior high school leavers have a year out from August to the August of the following year although this is not mandatory.

Pakistan

In Pakistan, the practice of going off after secondary school education, popularly called a 'failing', has been on a steep rise in recent[when?] years.

Israel

In Israel, it is customary for young adults who have completed their mandatory military service to go backpacking abroad in groups before starting university or a career.

Israel has also become a popular gap year travel destination for thousands of young Jewish adults from abroad each year.[8] There are over 10,000 participants annually who take a Masa Israel Journey gap year.[9]

Japan

The employment practice known as simultaneous recruiting of new graduates matches students with jobs before graduation, and the practice of a sabbatical is unusual in Japan as a result.[citation needed]

Nigeria

Nigerians typically enroll for a year long National service after college. It starts with a 3-week paramilitary boot-camp, from there, they are posted to a Government institution for the rest of the year.

South Africa

In the Republic of South Africa a year off is common. This is specifically for more affluent classes. School leavers often travel abroad for getting further life experience. It is not uncommon for gap year students in South Africa to go to Cape Town to get life experience. It is not mandatory but fairly common for individuals to volunteer during this time doing animal welfare or tree planting.

United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom a year out is a common choice before university, again to travel or volunteer, gaining life experience. All universities seem to welcome gap year applicants, no different from going straight to university from previous education.

United States of America

In the United States, the practice of taking a "year off" remains the exception, but is gaining in popularity.[10] Many colleges are now encouraging students to take time off, and some have even built gap year-like programs into the curriculum. Several high schools now have counselors specifically for students interested in taking a gap year.[11] Taking a year out has recently become slightly more common for Americans, with prevailing reasons as a feeling of being burned out of classroom education and a desire to understand oneself better.[12] Some 40,000 Americans participated in 2013 in sabbatical programs, an increase of almost 20% since 2006, according to statistics compiled by the American Gap Association. Universities such as New York University,[13] Amherst College, Princeton University, Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Middlebury College,[14] Yeshiva University,[15] and Reed College have formal policies allowing students to defer admission.[12] The Tufts University has a new program that seeks to remove financial barriers that prevent students with no money from taking a gap year after completing secondary to travel or do volunteer work in other countries.[16] Some formal gap year programs can cost as much as $30,000, but there are also cheaper alternatives becoming more widely available, some do this by offering room and board.[17][18]

Venezuela

In Venezuela, students from elite schools generally do their undergraduate studies outside of Venezuela. Gap years were unknown in Venezuela until educational consultant Nelson Agelvis, then counselor of the Moral y Luces Herzl-Bialik Jewish school in Caracas, insisted on having applicants to US colleges do them. The students went to leadership courses in Israel, PG years at elite US schools, tutorial colleges in the UK, work internships, language centers across the globe, and exploration gap years in remote countries. Today, the practice is widespread and Venezuela is a big economic contributor to the gap year, college studies and English studies industries, especially in countries such as Ireland.[19]

Yemen

In Yemen, a defer year is obligatory between secondary school and University. Unless one attends a private University, he must wait one year after secondary school before applying to University. Until the nineties it was mandatory for male graduates to go to the army for one year, and to teach in a school or work in a hospital for female graduates (and for men who cannot attend the army for health reasons).[citation needed]

See also

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References

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  2. The Center for Interim Programs
  3. Gap year travel
  4. Homepage of the Brussels-Capital Region Portal, Centre d'Informatique pour la Région Bruxelloise (CIRB)
  5. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Stadigt yngre studerende med færre sabbatår starter på universiteterne, Pressrelease, Universitet og Bygningsstyrelsen, Ministeriet for Videnskab, teknologi og Udvikling (Danish)
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  8. Judaism.about.com
  9. [1], About Masa Israel Journey.
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  12. 12.0 12.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  13. Deferring Your Enrollment
  14. http://www.middlebury.edu/admissions/apply/decisions/gapyearinfo
  15. Yeshiva University Rankings
  16. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  17. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  18. http://www.usnews.com/education/articles/2010/06/09/gap-year-program-profile-conservation-corps
  19. http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Venezuelan-students-flock-to-Ireland-and-cash-in-on-currency-controls.html