News & Press

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Go West, Young People! And East! (New York Times)

2014-03-18

I’M delighted to announce that the winner of my 2014 “win-a-trip” contestis … Oh, hang on. Maybe I should first exhort students to travel on their own — and cite Utah. Utah may well be the most cosmopolitan state in America. Vast numbers of young Mormons — increasingly women as well as men — spend...

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Tufts University Offers Financial Aid for Students’ Year Off (New York Times)

2014-03-15

BOSTON — Tufts University will launch a program next autumn to help cash-strapped students take a year off to travel and perform public service before starting their undergraduate classes. The program puts Massachusetts-based Tufts among a handful of American colleges offering to pay for a ‘gap year’ to explore the world and absorb different cultures...

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Seeing Value in ‘Gap Years,’ Tufts University Offers to Pay (Newsweek)

2014-03-15

By Zach Schonfeld Filed Under: Education, Colleges and Universities, Gap Years, Tufts University When Gregory Kristoff graduated high school in 2010, he opted not to start college immediately. Instead, he spent the better part of a year studying Chinese in Beijing and then Dalian, China. Then he went to Peru — and then, after a full year of such gallivanting, he began...

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New York Times Features Groundbreaking College Partnership

2012-09-13

Sometimes, after a hectic high school experience overshadowed by a competitive — or perhaps, disappointing — college admissions process, seniors just need a break. The idea of a gap year between high school and college could be tempting to students who are not ready to transition to the next level of education. And there are...

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Front Page Feature: Global Citizen Year in the SF Chronicle

2012-09-06

Lucy Blumberg was the classic Lowell High School student. The San Francisco teen strove for straight A’s and fell short by one B – in driver’s education – and was accepted into the prestigious Northwestern University, her first step to becoming a doctor. But by the time the college acceptance letter arrived in the mailbox, Blumberg realized she was burned out. She still wanted to...

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Fast Company Features Global Citizen Year

2012-07-06

When Global Citizen Year founder Abby Falik was 18, she wanted to enroll in the Peace Corps instead of going straight to college. “I was a good student, but ready to do something real in the world before continuing on to more school, and the Peace Corps says, ‘See you in four years, go to...

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Teach for the World

2012-02-17

Nicholas Kristof highlights Global Citizen Year as a model for engaging young Americans in global issues, and says: “Fewer than 30 percent of Americans have passports, and only one-quarter can converse in a second language. And the place to learn languages isn’t an American classroom but in the streets of Quito or Dakar or Cairo.”

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A Student’s ‘Gap Year’ Need Not Break The Bank

2012-02-17

If students are attracted to high-priced programs, like working on a foreign development project, there are ways to lower the price. For instance, Global Citizen Year, a San Francisco-based organization that places students in Senegal, Ecuador and Brazil, offers scholarships to help defray the cost. The two-year-old program looks at the same financial aid forms required by...

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Global Citizen Year: An Alternative Peace Corps

2012-02-16

Abby Falik was dismayed when she discovered she couldn’t join the Peace Corps after graduating from high school only because she hadn’t yet turned eighteen. So she started a Peace Corps of her own. Listen to the interview with Abby on Wisconsin Public Radio’s “Here on Earth” show.

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