Tuesday 13 December 2016

2016. Wow!

What at BIG YEAR! This has been the most transformational year since GSP was founded in 2012. Looking back, we can hardly believe so much has been packed into the last 12 months. 

GSP continued offering custom trips for businesses and schools throughout the USA. We continue to nurture lasting relationships with the organizations we work with in the US and Belize. Our partnerships are what binds us, and makes us like no other service based program. 

In addition to the voyages we lead as an organization, we also had a successful inaugural year with Global Leadership Adventures.
Providing the programming, as well as the International Director oversight, we are already planning for expansion and more GLA adventures in 2017.

We made it through awesome growth, new contracts, and even Hurricane Earl with great memories and good times behind us! All of this is fueled by the people we work with in the rural villages of Belize and we can't wait to get back there. We have LOTS of opportunities to get involved, so make 2017 your year to join us.

Tuesday 29 November 2016

Black Friday, Cyber Monday, Giving Tuesday

American culture. Love it or hate it, it's a thing. Across the USA we celebrated Thanksgiving last week with friends, family and loved ones. Often times we connect with people we haven't seen for a while and hopefully let stresses and conflicts lie dormant. 

Then the madness begins. Even before the turkey is out of the oven, stores are screaming for sales. With the holidays fast approaching, it has become an American tradition to grab deals on things you need and want for a bargain. Some love the rush of the sales, some detest it. And each year it keeps growing. These days make me think of the guests around the holiday dinner table. First, Black Friday is your loud, outrageous, energetic aunt. Cyber Monday your geeky cousin that knows all about the latest and greatest gadgets out this year. And then there's us. We are Giving Tuesday, your globally minded sister, getting out there to change the world. She's got a heart of gold, and pennies in her pocket. Would you like to see a couple of pictures from the last trip to Belize? 




This morning we were reminded by a dear friend that sometimes our work as a grassroots small business has a quiet voice. 

He wrote,


"I've been getting emails all day from big dumb nonprofits who do things I don't care about (mostly climbing-related), and it got me thinking about the most beautiful and inspiring women I know who are doing the coolest things without asking for anyone's recognition of their amazing work.
Can you point me in the direction of a donation page?"

Wow, we are blushing. And the answer is YES! 
Global Service Partnerships has a foundation that allows supporters to put their money where their heart is. 
Donations are gladly accepted on the Our Foundation page of the website. You can find it under the "Get Involved" tab.

We are truly grateful for our supporters and friends. We aren't always the loudest about our work, but we aren't afraid to ask when prompted. Like mom always used to say, "If you don't ask, you'll never know." 
I'm pretty sure I heard that around the dinner table.

Donations gladly accepted any day of the week, 
including Tuesdays. 

Wednesday 23 November 2016

The Book of Life

It is widely accepted that international travel is valuable. At the turn of the 5th century, St Augustine of Hippo is quoted to have said, “The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page.”

We embrace educational travel on all levels. Additionally, Global Service Partnerships voyages are one of a kind. While we are committed to the value of promoting the mind opening experiences that international travel brings, we believe in taking it a step further. We create sustainable partnerships, and return to the same communities while maintaining sensitivity to uplift and not become an overbearing presence in the villages where we work.

Listening to and working directly with local educators, principals and village leaders is our approach to curriculum planning and how we implement our program. Our participants get to immerse themselves in local culture and delve deeper than those visiting the country for its natural beauty and gorgeous ocean reef. The best of both worlds.

We hope you will join us on a voyage to Belize in 2017. Check out the “get involved” tab on our website for details. Let’s take in as much of the book of life as we can!


Tuesday 8 November 2016

Ethical Service, By Lauren D'Agostino

Meet Lauren, GSP Mentor 2015-2016
Thoughts on our program, and how we are getting international service right!
 The world of international volunteering is deeply fulfilling but also fraught with ethical dilemmas. To go to another country with little knowledge about that place and assuming that the privilege of being American is enough of a qualification to affect real change is a mentality that can lead to service work that, at best, doesn’t hurt the community it serves. To have the opportunity and means to travel is a gift. Wanting to use that gift in a way that you believe is beneficial to others is spectacular. But just because you want to do something good doesn’t absolve you of responsibility. In order to understand this responsibility, one must first understand the fact that their ability to travel is in fact a form of power. If you direct your economic and cultural influence towards a organization dedicated to changing conditions in the country you are traveling to, you are supporting that organization and its effects.
This is an example of a place founded by a Belizean educator and supported by many foreign volunteers.
A great partnership.
 
In a group of 20 volunteers, few, if any, are well versed in the nuances of Belizean culture. It would be very difficult to run a volunteer program where intimate cultural understanding was a prerequisite for participation. But without cultural understanding, how do we actually help a community? If our group were to come to a school and tell students what their community needs, it creates a power dynamic. We -the members of a wealthy and influential nation- have come to fix things for them. But what if the community feels things don’t need to be fixed? What if what we as Americans see as a problem is actually inconsequential?
Before I left for Belize this summer, I seriously considered the implications of my participation, but I felt that the curriculum for this summer’s camp was one that dealt gracefully with my ethical frustrations with international work. GSP focuses mainly on reinforcing skills needed to pass educational entrance exams and standardized tests. This summer, the curriculum focused on reinforcing those skills through empowerment activities.
Students at St Matthew's Government School Summer Day Camp, July 2016
By running a program where Belizean students are encouraged to explore their power to affect change in their communities, we are imparting one crucial fact on them-they hold the power to affect change. Our summer camp was developed because teachers expressed a need for more one on one time with students. Because they have so many children in their classrooms, many teachers felt that their students would benefit from more personal interactions with the people leading their classrooms. One on one time with students creates a space to understand each student educationally and personally. We talked about different learning styles and challenged students to self reflection through art, music and story writing. It was painful at times, and in two weeks, our students did not all transform into self-confident community leaders. But paired with GSP’s long term model, an empowerment based curriculum has the potential to impart the only thing that matters in the struggle for a safer and kinder world-that those who know their community are the ones who know what it best for it. I can honestly say that I was proud to be part of a group that understood that our power comes not from the fact we have free time or an interest in doing good, but that we have the opportunity to be tools for making others powerful.





Tuesday 1 November 2016

Join the Crew!

Since 2012, GSP has curated more than excellent educational travel. Our programs are packed with exploration of cultures, global citizenship, and oneself. We connect people and facilitate long lasting impact and personal development. It’s all about the people we work with day in and day out. Inspired by our proximity to the Caribbean Sea, we adopted the titles of a maritime crew.
Voyagers, Isa & Nikos leading at St Joseph's School
Introducing the Global Service Partnership Voyage Crew
Quartermasters - Creative. Proactive. Global Leaders.
Adult leaders who recruit participants, promote, and attend GSP Voyages in a leadership role.  
Mates - Driven. Committed. Experienced.
Returning voyagers of any age. Participants that have traveled with us on a previous trip and “know the ropes”.
Voyagers - Curious. Adventurous. Motivated.
First time program participants of any age.

Voyage Master - Emily Williams, Director of Education and Youth Leadership
The Captain - Kelli Soll, Founder and Director of GSP


We are enrolling for 2017 programs now,
and beginning to chart out the 2018 calendar.

Join our crew, plan a voyage, make it happen!
Click here for 2017 Voyage Registration.
The Crew - 2016 August Leadership Team 

Tuesday 11 October 2016

Reflection, by Erik Eisele

It’s been two months since I left Belize.
Two months. Two full moons. Two cell phone bills. It seems like a decade ago.
Erik, embracing the "Go Slow" lifestyle
Here in New England the leaves are changing. There is a bite in the air each morning. The ocean looks grey, no longer warm and inviting.
In Belize, however, it’s still summer, or at least some version of it. It is that season where shoes and shirts are optional. The salt air along the coast hangs thick and fans are mandatory for sleeping. It’s always that season in Belize, a perpetual Caribbean waltz where “Go slow” is more than a suggestion. It’s a way of life.
In the Cayo District 100 students are cracking their books. They have names like Chris and Karen and Joshua. They are wearing uniforms, pouring over worksheets, sitting at attention while the teacher talks and then goofing behind her back each time she turns. They are laughing, smiling, passing notes, switching from English to Spanish to Creol as comfortable as dancers, a veritable language cacophony.

And if you listen close each time they switch to English you might notice something: their mastery has grown stronger. They use the language with a slice more confidence than last year, something over the summer made it build, thicken. They are learning to wield it rather than being driven by it. They don’t just know English, they are becoming English speakers.
What happened?

Us. We happened. Me and 30 other volunteers ages 14 to 40 spent two weeks sweating through the Belizean summer to get these 100 Belizean students talking that way. For that time they were sitting at attention for us, and then of course goofing behind our backs. They learned our language and our names, played our games and sang our songs. They made us laugh, and when we left made us cry.
That was two months ago. Today sitting with my cup of hot apple cider in my kitchen watching the autumn wind pull leaves across the lawn it seems much further away than that. It seems like another lifetime, another world, a distant past.
But.
But there is always next summer. There is always another classroom, another 100 students. There is always a roomful of kids excited to sing songs and play.
But next time they won’t be strangers. They won't be students or kids. Next time I get to call them friends.
Erik joined us as a Mentor in 2016. He is a professional writer, sponsored athlete, and rope swing expert (obviously). He embodies global citizenship at its finest. Thank you Erik! 

You can read more of Erik's writing at erikeisele.com.

Tuesday 4 October 2016

Open Enrollment Season for 2017

Almost daily I receive emails from various companies notifying me that it is "open enrollment" time for health insurance. (Well, almost.) 

More importantly, it's GSP Belize program enrollment season! 

We make open enrollment much less complicated than health care, but much like the insurance open enrollment season, GSP also mirrors the opportunity for enrolling and preparing for the adventures in the year ahead. We have a number of options available for our 2017 voyagers. We have custom trips planned for different school groups and professionals from Boise, Iowa, Arizona and more. We also have trips scheduled for March 24-April 1, June 2-10 and August 4-12 that are open enrollment. If you or someone you know would be interested in joining one of our leadership voyages in 2017, contact us now!
Click this link to see our program options.

Kelli & Emily enjoying a day of Mayan history 1st hand!
Kelli and I are eager to share the beauty of the people, cultures and geographical beauty of Belize with as many people as possible, so let's make it happen!