Location
  • China
Length
4 - 12 weeks
Program Categories
Cultural Immersion
Need-based funding, General grants/scholarships, 529 Plan eligibility, BIPOC funding
Health & Safety

Program Details

Timeframe
Summer
Housing
Host Family
Language
Chinese

Pricing

Starting Price
5000
Dec 27, 2017
Oct 22, 2016
3 travelers are looking at this program

About Program

“A path, traveled, is no longer the same path. A name, spoken, is no longer the same name.” Like the words of the “Old Master” (Laozi), Chinese philosophy has long been a source of fascination and inspiration as well as confusion and debate. Today, the question of what people in China believe is as complex as ever: Taoist, Confucian, Buddhist, Muslim and Christian ideas along with new religious movements, nationalism, and consumer culture are all in the mix. So what does religious practice in China look like now? How do people find and create meaning in their lives?

This program is no longer offered. View more programs from Where There Be Dragons.

Video and Photos

Diversity & Inclusion

BIPOC Support

Unfortunately, discrimination based on race, ethnicity, national origin, and skin tone exists in different forms all over the world. In some destinations, especially rural or ethnically homogenous areas, people may not have had much exposure to racial diversity. As such, people with certain physical characteristics may experience unwanted attention. Most commonly, this might include staring, insensitive comments, people taking your photo (with or without asking), or attempts to touch your skin or hair. Black students traveling in parts of Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and North Africa have often reported higher levels of unwanted attention than their peers. White students traveling in parts of Asia and Africa have also reported receiving unwanted attention. Students are encouraged to communicate with staff if they feel their personal boundaries are being violated or if they feel unsafe or uncomfortable in any situation. We encourage you to believe your peers if/when they share experiences like this with you.

LGBTQIA+ Support

Social, cultural, religious, political, and legal attitudes toward the LGBTQ+ community vary around the world. According to the Global Acceptance Index, average levels of acceptance for LGBTQ+ people around the world have been increasing since 1981. However, many countries where Dragons operates programs may have social discrimination or even laws against being LGBTQ+. We have safely supported LGBTQ+ students in all of our program areas, and provide specific cultural and geographic advice to help students stay safe on course.

In some cases, students may be advised not to speak about their sexual orientations and/or gender identities with local contacts (such as homestay families, ISP mentors, language teachers, and guest speakers) due to safety concerns. Likewise, transgender and non-binary students may have to choose to present outwardly as male or female in certain contexts during the program. In other cases, “coming out” to some or all host community members may be a safe choice.

Neurodivergent Support

For students with neuro-differences (such as dyslexia, ADHD, ASD, TS, and dyspraxia), it is important to be aware that neurodiversity is likely viewed differently abroad than at home. People might not be familiar with labels or terms that are very common where you come from. If you struggle with lots of external stimuli, you should be prepared that you will be in some environments that are louder and busier than what you are used to.

Accessibility Support

If you are a student with a physical disability, you might encounter challenges around accessibility than you have at home. Many of the places we travel at Dragons don’t have building codes or other regulations in place to support people with visual, hearing, or mobility impairments. You may need accommodations or support that you don’t usually require in your life at home.

Impact

Sustainability

Dragons defines responsible travel as travel that is culturally conscious, environmentally responsible, and focused on developing meaningful connections and mutual respect in the communities to which we travel. Over the course of Dragons 25+ year history, we have cultivated long-standing relationships with respected community leaders, academics, social entrepreneurs and professionals involved in environmental and cultural preservation. In the more than 20 countries in which Dragons has operated, we have steadfastly adhered to minimum impact travel, an accurate and informed understanding of place, and the realization of maximum benefit for the communities we visit.

Ethical Impact

Dragons believes that we need to shift the way we think of volunteer travel. Instead of focusing on “service work”—on the idea that short-term volunteers can contribute to communities abroad—we advocate a paradigm shift: we choose, instead, to focus on “learning service.”

Learning Service is a holistic experience that combines an intimate and authentic engagement with the local community, the study of effective development, and the contribution to an established community-driven project. It is the process of living, working alongside, and humbly absorbing the culture of those being served while coordinating closely with project managers to understand the trajectory of the project, from inception to completion and beyond. It is an acknowledgment that often it is the volunteer who stands to gain as much or more from the work. And it is a commitment to making contributions that create positive impacts in the communities coupled with the humility to always listen and learn first.

Scholarships

Where There Be Dragons Financial Aid & 529 Funds

Where There Be Dragons offers need-based financial aid to students that demonstrate reasonable financial need and are excited to engage with communities around the world.

Program Reviews

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Brenden
5/5
Yes, I recommend this program

My Search for Meaning

I would like to share a letter of thanks I wrote to the Boulder Offices after my experience with Dragons...

Thank you for allowing me to embark on an educational journey, one lead from authentic ideals and one that has left a major impact on my development as a person. Thank you for the friends I have been able to make and the instructors that were able to teach me more than I learn in a given school year. Thank you for the lectures, lessons, and debates which most often lead me to think beyond, and now leave me thinking critically everyday. Thank you for the endless journey of possibility - making me believe in my mental, emotional, and physical self more than ever. Thank you for the exploration, as the endless trekking has allowed me to grasp the full beauty of China and learn that China is much more than an overpopulated and polluted country. Thank you for the policy of electronics, as disconnecting has made me realize that the devices that we think make us connected to the world actually disconnect us from the ones that are close. But most importantly, thank you for allowing me to search for my meaning, as I have learned that our search for meaning can just simply never end.

If I were to tell someone one thing I learned in my search for meaning; I learned that one’s philosophy on happiness will change depending on where you come from. Happiness - a paradox of itself is something that I much analyzed when I was with my Homestay family.

When trying to immerse myself in my rural Homestay family on the outskirts of Xining, I without a doubt was pushing myself out of a comfort zone that the Western World had forced upon me; not only because there was a major language barrier, but because the luxuries of indoor plumbing, a memory foam mattress, and indoor heating and insulation were swept away from me beneath my feet - literally, with myself sleeping on the cold Tibetan nights on a crummy blanket , laid upon dear mother earth. But, you may be asking yourself: How does this relate to happiness? After experiencing the Tibetan lifestyle - a very simple lifestyle to say at the least - I reflected back on the lifestyle I had at home - a lifestyle completed with all the physical luxuries of indoor plumbing and heating, but a lifestyle also filled with the essential ethics of freedom and privacy - things these Tibetan people have never experienced and probably will never experience. So, in regard to happiness, I constantly questioned myself “How do these people - living such a simple lifestyle remain happy and content, even in their most dreadful moments?” And as I type this, I still have no answer to that question.

The experiences, lessons, people, and places that encompassed my search for meaning all have left a huge impact on myself - and this letter is my best shot at conveying how thankful I am for the experience. “You travel not only to see the world, but to see yourself” Endless experiences could be shared in this letter - but I just wanted to provide you a brief insight into the experiences you (Dragons) were able to give me.

Thank you.

What would you improve about this program?
As an alumni of this course, I most certainly hold the utmost privilege to make such statement that there is no way this course could be improved.
43 people found this review helpful.
Read my full story

Questions & Answers