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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Travel
Will Coldwell

New initiative offers British people summer camp jobs in China

Adventure China councillor with campers
Smaller Earth’s Adventure China programme is to run at camps in Inner Mongolia and Qingdao

Young people have been heading west to work on American summer camps since the 1960s but now a small but growing number of travellers are heading east, to work in China. One travel agency has launched a new programme – the first and only one of its kind in the UK – facilitating work on Chinese summer camps.

Smaller Earth’s Adventure China programme gives young people the chance to work as a camp counsellor for eight weeks. There is a choice of two locations for applicants (who must be over 18): Camp Heavenland in Inner Mongolia and Camp Future in a nature reserve outside the city of Qingdao.

As well as pitching itself as an opportunity to gain work experience, it also allows participants time to travel in China. The Adventure China programme costs £399 for eight weeks, including all food, accommodation, flights, insurance and $200-$500 in pay. Camp counsellors then have the chance to travel around China for up to 90 days afterwards.

A male counsellor with campers in China.
The initiative hopes to deliver a contrast to the regular gap year travel experience

Tobenna Ogwunda, 19, a biomedical sciences student at the University of Aberdeen, worked as a camp counsellor in Qingdao last year, during a trial run of the programme, after she didn’t get a camp place in the US.

“On the weekends we got two days off to travel and visit the city, so I got to see the night life in Qingdao, sing lots of karaoke with the other counsellors, visit mountains and other really fun activities.”

Oliver Norris, from Adventure China said: “Our American summer camp programme is still enormously popular but we’re finding that the chance to learn Mandarin Chinese is a real pull, as is the desire for an authentic travel experience; one that offers an additional level of challenge and a contrast to the regular gap year routine.”

Though the majority of tourists to China are from other Asian countries (74.6% of inbound trips), it is attracting an increasing number of young people from further afield looking to study degrees in business and economics.

China currently receives more than 400,000 international students a year, with a growing number from the UK. In 2013 the British Council launched the Generation UK–China campaign, which aims to help 80,000 students from the UK gain study or work experience opportunities in China by 2020. Research conducted in 2016 showed that UK parents considered Mandarin the “most beneficial” non-European language.

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