• About
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
Monday, February 9, 2026
Newsletter
SUBSCRIBE
E-MAGAZINE
  • Latest News
  • All Topics
    • Curriculum
      • STEM
      • Leadership
      • Principally Speaking
      • Sustainability
      • Literacy and Numeracy
      • Physical Education
      • Health and Wellness
      • Arts and Culture
      • Outdoor Education
      • Beyond the Classroom
      • Financial Literacy
    • Technology
      • Teaching computer programming
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Online Studying Tools
      • Online Teaching Tools
      • Virtual Classrooms
      • Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)
    • Policy and Reform
      • Australian Primary Principals Association
      • Australian Secondary Principals Association
      • First Nations Culture and History
      • E-Safety Commissioner
      • ACARA/NAPLAN
      • Department of Education
    • Opinion
      • The Last Word
      • Expert Contributors
      • First Nations Voices
  • Professional Development
  • Events
  • Resources
    • Webinar
    • Research and Reports
    • Video
    • Products and Services
    • Thought Leaders
No Results
View All Results
  • Latest News
  • All Topics
    • Curriculum
      • STEM
      • Leadership
      • Principally Speaking
      • Sustainability
      • Literacy and Numeracy
      • Physical Education
      • Health and Wellness
      • Arts and Culture
      • Outdoor Education
      • Beyond the Classroom
      • Financial Literacy
    • Technology
      • Teaching computer programming
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Online Studying Tools
      • Online Teaching Tools
      • Virtual Classrooms
      • Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)
    • Policy and Reform
      • Australian Primary Principals Association
      • Australian Secondary Principals Association
      • First Nations Culture and History
      • E-Safety Commissioner
      • ACARA/NAPLAN
      • Department of Education
    • Opinion
      • The Last Word
      • Expert Contributors
      • First Nations Voices
  • Professional Development
  • Events
  • Resources
    • Webinar
    • Research and Reports
    • Video
    • Products and Services
    • Thought Leaders
No Results
View All Results
Home Curriculum Beyond the Classroom

How travel connects to the classroom

by Toli Papadopoulos
October 31, 2022
in Beyond the Classroom, Latest News
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
How travel connects to the classroom

Two young girls student traveler enjoy a tour of the ancient Greek amphitheater

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Travelling creates stronger teachers, and in turn stronger students. Studies continuously show how travel improves academic performance, and there are learning opportunities for students before, during, and after you return from your tour.

For teachers, travel is professional development at the highest level. Travel brings lesson plans to life for classrooms, and the benefits are shared by the entire school community.

Learning about your destination

Before you travel, there are endless academic opportunities available for students to explore their destination. From key moments in history, to the music that found its beat there, each destination holds a vault of information. Humanities classrooms can explore the literature, sociology, and language of a destination. Science classrooms study weather patterns, with each student making their prediction of what the weather on tour will be like. Use your tour as the setting for your next great lesson.

Developing research skills

Research skills have become entirely digital for many of our students. Take the learning offline and have students prepare questions for your local guides before you travel. Your students will be collecting primary sources that will reinforce their research. Take it to the next level and have students interview a local while on-tour. Students will understand the value of “authentic resources” and how the secondary sources taken off the internet don’t always tell the full story. What will students research? Use the itinerary to create a list of research topics, or have your students strengthen their intellectual curiosity skills by creating their own thesis statement.

Strong writing takes practice

Writing by hand may seem tedious to some, but the slow process gives your brain time to process the information. Have your students write each day to recount the experience by hand. Each student will create a narrative that makes sense to them, instead of the verbatim note-taking habits they sometimes fall into. In doing so, you will be helping students increase both reading comprehension and literacy as the brain must actively engage with what they are writing. These small snapshots of their experience can roll into a longer writing assignment after their tour in the form of a short story, or simply will become your students most valued souvenir.

Civics in the digital age

Our students seem to know their way around a phone or a computer better than we do. Let them use those skills for good. By capturing video and photographs, students can bring their experience home and educate their peers and community. You can bring the Daintree Discovery Centre back to the classroom with student curated content. Give students a specific topic to capture, or collectively get behind a specific cause. Deepen the learning experience by limiting the time students have to capture this content at each destination. This keeps them off their phones the entire time, while still giving them space for at least one good selfie.

Lesson plans come to life

When teachers travel, it shows up in their lesson plans. The amount of information available can seem overwhelming at times, but allowing educators the time and opportunity to explore their passions further can only heighten the learning that takes place when they return. Teachers capture the information shared on tour in a number of ways, and use the experiences to create context for their instruction. By sharing experiences with students, you open the world to the entire classroom. Students may be unaware of how diverse and information-rich the world is, and first-hand experiences help broaden that perception.

Regardless of what year level or subject area you teach, your tour and classroom instruction can work hand in hand. You will be creating a unique learning experience for all your students; one that will stay with them for life.

If broadening your student’s educational experience through travel sounds like something you’re interested in, contact WorldStrides’ team of experts here, worldstrides.com.au

Related Posts

The latest data reveals concerning growth in the number of young Aussies
without access to a computer at home. Image: WorkVentures

Digital divide widens as charity urges more support for students

by Rhiannon Bowman
February 6, 2026

More than 1.4 million young Australians cannot access a computer at home, highlighting a growing digital divide and prompting renewed...

Author Huda Hayek with students at Yea Primary School for the Young Regional Writers’ Program. Credit: Katie Merritt. Source: State Library Victoria.

Regional primary schools to benefit from expanded writers’ program

by Rhiannon Bowman
February 4, 2026

Primary schools across regional Victoria are set to strengthen literacy learning this year, with hundreds of students participating in an...

School-aged Siah is living with blood cancer. Image: Leukaemia Foundation

Blood cancer disrupting education for hundreds of Australian students

by Rhiannon Bowman
February 4, 2026

As students across Australia return to school for the new year, hundreds of desks will remain empty – not because...

Join our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.
Education Matters is an informative, valuable resource for decision makers of both primary and secondary schools Australia-wide. We provide a content-rich, comprehensive buyer’s guide of the most reliable, trustworthy school suppliers in the market. This is coupled with the latest in news and expert views about the topics and issues currently impacting the education sector.

Subscribe to our newsletter

View our privacy policy, collection notice and terms and conditions to understand how we use your personal information.

About Education Matters

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Emagazine
  • Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Collection Notice
  • Terms & Conditions

Popular Topics

  • Latest News
  • Beyond the Classroom
  • Curriculum
  • Health & Wellbeing
  • Hot Topic
  • Principally Speaking
  • Products and Services
  • Sustainability
  • The Last Word
  • Professional Development
  • Events
  • Technology
  • Video

© 2026 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited

No Results
View All Results
NEWSLETTER
SUBSCRIBE
E-MAGAZINE
  • Latest News
  • All Topics
    • Curriculum
      • STEM
      • Leadership
      • Principally Speaking
      • Sustainability
      • Literacy and Numeracy
      • Physical Education
      • Health and Wellness
      • Arts and Culture
      • Outdoor Education
      • Beyond the Classroom
      • Financial Literacy
    • Technology
      • Teaching computer programming
      • Artificial Intelligence
      • Online Studying Tools
      • Online Teaching Tools
      • Virtual Classrooms
      • Bring Your Own Device (BYOD)
    • Policy and Reform
      • Australian Primary Principals Association
      • Australian Secondary Principals Association
      • First Nations Culture and History
      • E-Safety Commissioner
      • ACARA/NAPLAN
      • Department of Education
    • Opinion
      • The Last Word
      • Expert Contributors
      • First Nations Voices
  • Professional Development
  • Events
  • Resources
    • Webinar
    • Research and Reports
    • Video
    • Products and Services
    • Thought Leaders
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact Us

© 2026 All Rights Reserved. All content published on this site is the property of Prime Creative Media. Unauthorised reproduction is prohibited