10 Good Reasons to Take A Gap Year Before College

07/6/09  Print This Post Print This Post    14 Comments   Popular   Written by Tim Patterson
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Photo by Brieze Levy

“Gap Year: A period of time taken by a student to travel or work, often after high school or before starting graduate school, as a break from formal education.” - dictionary.com

Many competitive colleges and universities encourage applicants to pursue a gap year option after graduating from high school.

The colleges believe that students who come to higher education with an extra year of life experience bring valuable perspective to the classroom.

“Taking a gap year in China was the best decision I ever made,” says Courtney Zenner, 26, who spent a year exploring China with the organization School Year Abroad.

“My experience in China exposed me to possibilities I never knew existed, taught me to think independently and allowed me to see the world.”

Courtney went on to graduate from Barnard College with a degree in Asian Studies and now leads semester programs in China and India.

Real world life experience gives gap year students a greater sense of personal direction and specific academic goals.

“I didn’t take a gap year, and I wish I had,” said Jessica Newman, 27, who is now an academic dean at South High-School in Denver, Colorado.

“Nobody knows exactly what they want to do when they’re eighteen years old. It’s smart to take time to figure out who you are before you rush into what you’re going to be.”

Gap years are popular with European and Australian students, but remain relatively rare in the Americas. However, in recent years more and more American students are preparing for college by taking a gap year.

Here are 10 good reasons for you to go for a gap year.

1. Learn About the World

Although gap years don’t have to involve foreign travel, most gap year students seize the opportunity to travel abroad.

Young people are able to figure out who they are and what inspires them.

This firsthand experience of unfamiliar cultures offers profound lessons, especially for curious and motivated young people.

After all, engaged travel is one of the best forms of genuine education.

2. Learn About Yourself

For students who grew up in a structured environment with clearly defined social, athletic and academic goals, gap years offer valuable personal freedom.

Young people are able to figure out who they are and what inspires them. During the gap year, they begin to emerge as self-actualized adults.

3. Have Fun

You only live once. A gap year bursting with travel, adventure, exploration and self-discovery can be a life-changing and intensely memorable experience.

4. Overcome Challenges

Make no mistake – a gap year isn’t time to slack off or take a vacation.

Gap year students usually work, volunteer or undertake self-directed service projects.

For many students, especially those from sheltered backgrounds, the gap year is a time to learn how to get along in the real world. This process isn’t always easy, but it is an essential part of growing up.

Photo by Adam Brooks

5. Save Money

There’s a common perception that gap years are only for wealthy students.

However, taking a gap year can actually save you money in the long run. Gap year students often work part-time as they travel, or volunteer for organizations that cover their expenses.

At the other end of the spectrum, structured gap year programs often offer college credit and cost less than college tuition.

The kicker is that by taking a gap year, students are much more likely to know what they want to study in college. Clear academic and career goals keep students from aimlessly drifting through 4 years of college and 3 years of graduate school at upwards of $40,000 per year.

6. Improve Your College Admission Chances

Imagine an admissions officer trying to decide between two applicants.

Both applicants boast impressive grades, scored high on the SATs, are highly recommended by their teachers and played varsity field hockey.

However, one applicant has volunteered for 8 months in East Africa, speaks some Swahili and is passionate about public health issues in developing countries.

Who do you think the admissions officer would choose?

7. Avoid the Social Pitfalls of College

Students who arrive at college with a full year of life experience under their belts are less likely to engage in risky behavior than students for whom college is their first intoxicating dose of freedom from parental supervision.

On this note, gap year students often become effective role models for their college classmates.

Photo by Camille Albouy

8. Find Your Academic Niche

College can be an opportunity to explore a wide range of academic disciplines, but students will get a lot more out of their education if they have at least a general idea of what they want to study, and what career their expensive education will prepare them for.

9. Learn A Foreign Language

Proficiency in a foreign language is an invaluable skill for young people in today’s interconnected world.

Living, working and traveling overseas is the best way to learn a foreign language, which means that gap year students who supplement their high-school Spanish with travel in Bolivia have a serious advantage over their peers.

10. Get Some Serious Perspective

Education, at its core, is about accumulating intimate knowledge of the world through a wide range of life experiences.

Nicholas Kristof
, a Rhodes scholar, Pulitzer Prize winning author and star columnist for the New York Times has this to say about gap years:

The bottom line is that you’ll almost certainly learn more from a gap year than you will in any single year in college.

Community Connection

I personally recommend the gap year programs offered by Where There Be Dragons, an educational youth travel organization that specializes in cultural immersion in developing countries.


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About the Author

Matador ID: rsw

Tim Patterson is a travel instructor for Where There Be Dragons and a contributing editor to the Matador Network.

14 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Julie replied on July 6, 2009

    Tim-

    Great article. I never studied abroad or took a gap year and if I changed anything about my past, it would be to have done both.

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  • Turner replied on July 7, 2009

    Good one, Tim.

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  • bumblingbill replied on July 7, 2009

    Wow, good work – it gives people an opportunity to fight their corner when in battle with the parents. It’s hard to explain why something like this would be rewarding and you have nicely summed it up. Some really useful Gap Year sites out there; Gapyear.com, Realgap.co.uk & Gap-year.com

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  • Sherry Ott replied on July 7, 2009

    Nice article. However someone needs to tell Jessica Newman that there’s nothing stopping her from taking her gap year now…but she can call it a career break! You get many of the same benefits and in the end it can help your career! I did a career break after 14 yrs of working – I called it an adult gap year.

    Everyone – college student and ‘ladder climber’ needs reason #10!

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  • Babel replied on July 7, 2009

    so Jessica – move on ;)

    nice article! i hope i will take a gapyear after my apprenticeship 2011! maybe australia? :) n8

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  • Richard Oliver replied on July 8, 2009

    This is a great article and most pertinent in these difficult economic times. I would add another major advantage: the skills and experience gained on a gap year will significantly improve your employability.
    The UK has a tradition of young people taking a gap year between school and college that is still gaining in popularity. Now we are seeing more graduates taking time out to do something useful, improve their employability and gain an advantage over their peers. We are also seeing a in increased take up by those taking a sabbatical or career break.
    Many who contemplate a gap year find it difficult to know where to start and how to select a suitable and worthwhile project that best suits their unique needs. It was for this reason that Year Out Group was formed nearly ten years ago. It offers useful advice and a wide variety of placements in over 90 countries.

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    • Tim Patterson replied to Richard Oliver on July 10, 2009

      Thanks for the comment, Richard. Year Out looks very interesting and I’d love to profile it on Matador Abroad.

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  • Teresa replied on July 8, 2009

    This is making me wish *I* took a gap year instead of jumping straight into college. Maybe I can take a gap year AFTER college? As in, a gap between college and a career? Not that I would have the budget to do so, but hey…

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  • Olga replied on July 10, 2009

    Definitely. When I studied abroad in England, many of my British classmates had taken gap years, and they had a lot more direction and focus because of it. But then again, it’s never too late to fill ‘gaps’ in your career, plans and life with travel!

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  • Sarah Vazquez replied on July 14, 2009

    So true, so true!

    Taking a “Year On” has been the best decision I’ve made.
    I WWOOFed in France (WWOOF.org) and did an experiential education program in Nepal with Dragons (WhereThereBeDragons.com).

    This article is serious amo for battling with any parent hesitation. Great!

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