When you plan a class or school trip there are some easy to follow tips that will help you and your class members get the most out of the experience. Planning and carrying out a school trip can be an incredibly stressful adventure if you don’t plan correctly, but as the trip planner you should get to have fun too. Follow these easy school trip planning tips to help minimize your stress level and maximize your enjoyment of the trip. Please note that these tips are primarily focused on middle school and high school group travel topics. Older groups may not require this much attention.
1. When planning a class or school trip plan to take along a medical professional.
If your budget allows for it, and you need another chaperone on the trip, consider asking your school nurse to go along on the trip with you. Other alternatives could be the parent of a student in the class that is a nurse or physician. You should plan on giving this person a reduced price on the trip, but in return you will not have to worry as much about what to do if a student gets sick after you leave. If at all possible always take the school nurse on the trip. They have liability coverage through the school just in case something goes wrong.
2. Plan ahead and make sure your chaperones are kept busy during the trip.
Taking more chaperones on trip than you need is not necessarily a good thing. Sometimes adults can be even more of a pain than the students can, especially if that adult looks at the class trip as a vacation for themselves rather than as an educational experience for the students.
3. Ban alcohol on your trip.
I’m not talking about just students, I’m also talking about adults. Many PTA and other groups have passed resolutions that forbid any adult on a school trip from consuming alcohol even if no students are around. First, this policy sends the right message to your students. Second, it is a good safeguard against a parent calling your principal and complaining because their daughter told them that one of your chaperones was down drinking in the hotel bar last night.
4. School trip chaperones should be provided with a guidebook.
Make a planning packet specifically for your trip’s chaperones that spells out your expectations, their duties, and a more in-depth itinerary than the one you give to the students. You should also include in this guidebook a trip roommate listing, airline flight assignments, travel agent emergency numbers, and cell phone numbers for you and your trip nurse.
5. Always have an emergency plan in place for your trip participants.
Give each student a wallet sized card with cell phone numbers, hotel numbers, and other important information to use on the chance that they get separated from the group. If your class trip takes you to a country that does not speak your language, always include on the card a sentence or two in the native language explaining how to contact you. Tell your students to present this card to only to a police officer or someone they believe they can trust and to only use it if needed.
6. ALWAYS have a discipline plan set up for your class or school group.
For more information on this very important aspect of planning a school trip please visit my articles on School Trip Conduct Policies, Group Discipline While Traveling and others in the Educational Travel Section.
Chad Criswell
http://www.articlesbase.com/travel-articles/top-six-tips-for-school-and-class-trips-38853.html
#1 by Sean on May 20th, 2009
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Any tips for low budget/maximum fun end of the year class trips?
Our class has approx. $ 7 per student to spend (30 students) but anything fun would include long bus trips and high entrance fees. I'm looking for something fun on school grounds or in a parents' backyard but all I can think of right now is a big ice cream party or a mudslide (in the latter case I doubt girls would want to participate though) Any groundbreaking ideas out there?
This is for a 7th grade class trip.
#2 by Bourbon on May 20th, 2009
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You didn't say how old you guys are, but there are some universal things to consider.
If you supply the food it is essentially crossed off your list. Picnic food is always good, barbecues, chicken, potato salad, or sandwiches. Outside depends on weather. If you have nice weather, go for the water fights, slip and slide, water baloons. It doesn't have to be mud to be wet. If someone has an ipod and a speaker deck, music is free too. Is a beach party/picnic an option, bonfire is always a great way to party, toasted marshmellos, s'mores. I think the time of day would be based on the age of your class. Afternoon for tweens to late evening for olders, frizbee, vollyball, limbo. Again food an music provided by the class would mean the $210 could be spent on something special. Hope this helps…bottom line, have fun.
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