Profile last updated: Sep 21, 2023

Vitals

  • GYA Accredited Since: 2014
  • Enrolling: Yes
  • Mission Statement:

    We connect deeply with our global communities and travel with purpose and intention. Our students redefine what it means to embark on a meaningful gap year abroad. Learn a new language, live with a host family, and participate in a volunteer project—all while earning college credit—on a gap year or three-month semester around the world.

    Join our small groups in Hawai'i, Italy & Greece, India & Nepal, Southeast Asia, South America, Central America, UK & the Netherlands, and the South Pacific.

    Ready to extend your learning journey? Our year-long Latitudes program allows you to choose one of our group semesters in the fall, followed by a three-month focused volunteer placement in the spring.

    College credit and scholarships are available on both our semester and year-long programs.

    We are accredited by the Gap Year Association and are a Certified B Corporation.

  • Level of Independence/Supervision (mouse-over for definition):
    1
    2
    3
    4
    5

Program Locations


Typical Itinerary

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
W
e
e
k

1
SOUTHEAST ASIA SEMESTER: Breakfast with homestay family; Practice Thai and help cook dinner with host family. Thai language class; Enjoy last evening with host family at a community feast/Thai dancing ceremony. Take a local bus to your next destination; Reflect with group on homestays/ language lessons. Explore temples of Chiang Mai and learn about their history; Out to dinner with group. Hop on the train from Chiang Mai to Thai Plum Village, outside of Bangkok. Listen to an "Introduction to Buddhism" talk from a monk; Walking meditation through rice fields/ communities. Awake with a gentle yoga class; Play basketball or soccer with younger monks.
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
W
e
e
k

2
As a group, make your way to the hills of Northern Thailand, where you'll stay with a homestay family and participate in everyday activities. Practice your Thai basics with your homestay family as you help prepare the morning meal and follow your host siblings into the gardens to see what's fresh. Spend time in communities working on sustainable and regenerative practices to heal both humans and the land. You will spend time in an ecovillage in Thailand and learn about holistic practices. With your Overseas Educators and hosts, explore questions related to modern day life in the hilltribe communities. Explore questions such as, "How are communities in Southeast Asia approaching sustainability? What traditional practices can be revived Prepare food for a community gathering/pot luck. Spend time meeting refugees, serving food, and hearing their stories firsthand. Work on a community-driven project that your host community needs support with - learn new skills from your hosts and give back by putting them to use in the community. Say a bittersweet goodbye to the hilltribe host community and make your way to the next stop - Cambodia!

Our daily schedule varies week to week and program to program. Some days you might wake up to a home cooked breakfast from your host mom followed by language classes in the morning and afternoon visits to local markets. Other weeks you might be out in the Amazon jungle planting trees with environmental organizations to help offset your carbon footprint. Some evenings you might have group meetings and reflections, group game nights, or free time. On another week, you might go with your group on an adventure such as rafting or trekking.


Program Outcomes

  • Travel in a responsible, smart, and savvy way by taking local transportation, booking accommodation, managing a modest budget, and learning how to authentically engage with local culture and customs.
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the host region through language basics, and a greater understanding of politics, history, culture, and religion.
  • Examine global interdependence through the lens of privilege, perspective, social justice, and responsibility.
  • Achieve a greater understanding of your genuine interests and passions, and continue building the confidence and self-esteem necessary to engage in that which inspires and motivates you.
  • Develop a more refined sense of what you want to study before starting college (if you decide college is the right fit for you), and improve your academic performance as you study subjects that you love!
  • Demonstrate interpersonal and intercultural communication skills with a wide variety of people.
  • Strengthen essential job and life skills while building your resume in exceptionally creative ways.
  • Learn how to be independent, self-reliant, and overcome challenges.
  • Practice the concepts of compassion, empathy, and gratitude.
  • Manage stress in productive ways.

These learning outcomes are realized through a dynamic process of action and reflection.

Here's an example:

Action: Your group is living with homestay families in rural Ecuador. The homes are simple, and families have few material possessions. You work alongside your host community all day, planting endemic trees, practicing Spanish, eating meals together, and playing the occasional game with local children.

Our local partner discusses the village economy and informs us that most families own their own land and house, which have been passed on for generations. She tells us that most local families have little to no debt and that they grow a large percentage of their own food. You notice that most locals are easy to smile, laugh, and be generous with their time and attention.

Reflection: The next morning, after an awesome yoga session with a backdrop of the Andes, your Overseas Educator engages your group in two CDLs called "Cultural Values and Freedom from Debt." Each group member creates a "values hierarchy," listing what you value in numerical order.

Then you discuss questions such as:

How are your values a reflection of your culture? Are you (and the people you love) living a life that reflects your values? Why or why not? How are your values similar and/or different to the apparent values of our host culture? You then dive into the concept of debt and participate in activities that demonstrate our cultural emphasis on loans and debt, and the complexities thereof.

How does being in debt lead to achieving (or undermining) our values? Is having access to loans a source of liberation, as we buy homes and cars, or does being in debt undermine the value of freedom? You begin asking each other: how do we define "wealth"? How has our cultural emphasis on material wealth created opportunities (or obstacles) for us? Does our emphasis on material wealth promote a strong sense of community?

This is an example of experiential education at play. Through what may seem like a fairly normal day of working and interacting with people from another culture, we observe differences in how communities function, how children spend their time, the degree to which our values hierarchies differ, and we end up having in-depth discussions about the fundamental nature of our own culture.

And the conversation goes on from day to day, building an increased global perspective, a stronger sense of self, and a greater understanding of how we want to conduct our own lives.

Program Details

  • Program Starts: Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer
  • Program Duration: Less than 2 months, Semester, Yearlong
  • Typical Program Cost: $5,950 - $16,400
  • Program Financial Aid: Yes
  • Other Financial Aid Details:

    As a Carpe Diem participant, you'll not only have access to our immersive, volunteer-based programming and stellar staff; you can also receive up to 18 college credits (and receive an official transcript from Portland State University).

    At Carpe Diem, we strive to make our programs accessible to all interested students. To that end, we have designed a three-pronged scholarship program to support socioeconomic diversity within our student groups. Our three scholarship options are: 1) Access Scholarship, 2) Inclusion Scholarship, 3) Carpe Mundi Scholarship. Scholarships range from $1,000 - $5,000.


Staff Training and Certification

We are proud to conduct one of the longest trainings for Overseas Educators (OEs) in the industry, where OEs practice safety and risk management techniques. All Carpe Diem OEs hold current Wilderness First Responder (WFR) and CPR certifications. In some cases, OEs will obtain more extensive certifications, such as EMT or WEMT.


Peer Reviews



Support the GYA and Donate Here