My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Connect with other parents whose children are starting secondary school on this forum.

Secondary education

Anyone done a private foreign exchange?

29 replies

Gymbob · 28/06/2013 18:16

DD1's Spanish exchange fell through due to there not being enough interest at school. She was so disappointed I have been looking into the idea of her doing a private exchange with another family who have a child we could host too. There seems to be quite a few websites with kids looking for host families....all the families look so 'normal', in fact much more normal than ours!

Please tell me what you know.....

OP posts:
Report
MrsPHollywood · 29/06/2013 15:03

Tbh I personally wouldn't entertain the idea. It's a shame that the exchange fell through and I understand your DD will be really dissappointed, but the idea of my child being abroad staying with a family that I don't really know makes me shiver. I know, I know chances are the other family would be thoroughly decent and provide a great experience (as I'm sure your family would) but I couldn't risk it.

Report
MrsPHollywood · 29/06/2013 15:05

On re reading your OP I realise you really wanted to hear from posters with experience, sorry I didn't help with that!

Report
Gymbob · 29/06/2013 17:48

thanks MrsP. I always like an opinion and anyway I feel the same as you I'm just trying not to Grin

hasn't any mums netters done a privately arranged exchange or have I posted in the wrong place Sad

OP posts:
Report
Gymbob · 29/06/2013 17:51

oh and the thought of the school exchange alone gave me serious heebeegeebees Grin

OP posts:
Report
Talkinpeace · 29/06/2013 21:27

Yup.
Friend of a friend.
She came to us for a week. And what a miserable cow she was.
I went to her family for a week : got on great with her mad french nobility family, avoided her.
An excellent experience,
but I would try the FOAF route rather than a website

Report
Matsikula · 29/06/2013 21:42

I did one and it was fine. Didn't get on like a house on fire with the girl, but all in all I think we both enjoyed it well enough it. Stayed with a host family another time and am still in touch with the girl my age - would count her as a friend.

Can't remember the name of the company we used, but they placed a group in the same school - that way if it's awful you have someone to confide in.

It will be great for her self-confidence.

Report
Guntie · 29/06/2013 21:46

I did it as a teenager. Please PM if you have questions. It was the best thing I ever did. (Bar marriage/kids Grin ) I cannot stress how highly I recommend it!!!

Report
Gymbob · 30/06/2013 19:31

Thanks guys, knew I'd get some good feedback.

Talkinpeace have looked at the FOAF website but can't see where they do any foreign exchanges, am I looking at the right one - Friend of a Friend?

OP posts:
Report
Talkinpeace · 30/06/2013 19:37

sorry, not meaning website, meaning real friends of friends .....

Report
Gymbob · 30/06/2013 21:41

Oh, well that's blown that then - I don't know any that are friends of friends or even friends of friends of friends Grin

OP posts:
Report
Talkinpeace · 30/06/2013 22:16

bet you do .... ask around at work / at school / at the hairdresser
people who live / have holiday homes in France / spain ....

Report
Eastpoint · 01/07/2013 06:59

I did it as a child, as did lots of my friends. I agree with Talkinpeace, someone will know a family. Why don't you ask her Spanish teacher if they can help?

Report
Umlauf · 01/07/2013 07:09

I did it as a child for years, in Germany, Spain and France! I would also highly recommend it, it was one of the best things I ever did!

I did have links to all of my exchange partners though, through friends of teachers or friends of friends of friends. I would second the idea of asking the Spanish teacher, she may well have friends with children similar ages to your dd. otherwise, I'm a teacher in Spain and know a lot of children, if you're stuck pm me!

Report
Areyoumadorisitme · 01/07/2013 08:02

I did it years ago when I was in the equivalent of year 9. I was desperate to go and school didn't arrange them until year 10. We did it through a private company with no personal connections, it was 25 years ago now when people were a little less paranoid. The basic premise was that if their child was going to come to us then they would treat me well. And they did.

It was brilliant, the first year we did two weeks each way and the following year we did 3 weeks each way so spent all summer together.

In fact it was more successful that the ones arranged through school! In all I did exchanges with 4 families over 4 years, very positive experiences that I would be keen for my kids to also do.

Report
Moominmammacat · 01/07/2013 08:20

My DSs have done nine exchanges, several of them private but always friend of a friend route. They've been great. Even when the other child hasn't been an ideal match, it has taught them how to cope in less than ideal circumstances. I'd do it all again ... lots of free holidays as several of them have kept in touch.

Report
AliceInSandwichLand · 03/07/2013 18:11

I have two daughters aged 18 and 15. The 18 year old did her first privately arranged exchange, using the website Lingoo, at the age of 15, with a French girl, and the following summer with a Spanish girl. She has now exchanged with each girl three times, so that overall she has spent a couple of months with each girl over the course of the three years. We have met the French girl's parents, who have become family friends. My eighteen year old is off to uni this autumn to study modern foreign languages, largely inspired by her exchange experiences. Her French partner is studying English at uni, and her Spanish partner, who is studying to be a teacher, is also still studying English. My younger daughter is off on her first exchange this summer with a girl she already gets on with well via Facebook and whose mother we have already met. All these exchanges were via Lingoo, and I can't speak too highly of the experiences we have all had as a result. As an English family, you will find yourself with dozens (for Spanish) or hundreds (for French) of familie to choose from. You can find a match with a child with similar interests, pick your region, chat via email or FB before you commit - we didn't have any contacts before Lingoo and have only had positive experiences. PM me if you would like more info, as I don't come on Mumsnet very often these days - lucky I saw your post!

Report
Gymbob · 03/07/2013 19:57

wow thanks so much for the positive replies. the friend of a friend sounds good and I have emailed the Spanish teacher as you suggest.

off to check lingoo out now thanks. nothing better in my book than a recommendation. what well travelled kids you all have Smile Smile

OP posts:
Report
BackforGood · 04/07/2013 23:44

I did - but in the 70s before anyone had heard of internet or websites Grin
It was someone my Mum worked with, who had a pen pal she'd had for 30+ years (and had visited, etc), whose sister wanted her two dds to exchange with two sisters in England. That's where dsis and I stepped in Grin
As someone said further up the thread, it was a fantastic experience and one I look back fondly on all these years later. Improved my French 10fold. They then came over to England a month or two later.
I'd love to find something similar for my dcs.

Report
catherinemellor · 19/11/2015 09:38

Hi there,

I've heard a really good language exchange company is Lingoo //www.lingoo.com - they advertise loads of different exchange destinations on their site and you can also welcome others into your home by becoming a host family. They offer some great destinations such as Spain, France and the UK Star - I highly recommend checking it out if you're still looking for a language exchange! Smile

Report
alejandramartinez · 19/11/2015 09:54

My daughter spent one full month of the last summer abroad. She was on Zurich. Before heading to her exchange he attended a language course here in French Language because sometimes the interaction with other people may be hard if you do not now anything about the language. I booked the French course here. It is highly recommended. www.languagecoursesuk.co.uk/book-now/

Report
purpledasies · 19/11/2015 17:16

I organised one through the Lingoo website for DS (then 14). There were masses of French teenagers looking for an English speaking exchange, and we live quite near a major airport so had our pick of them really. We chose one where the dad spoke reasonable English and who offered to take DS sailing in the Med for 10 days Grin

Ds had a great time. We texted regularly and I called him a couple of times.

Before he travelled we skyped the other family a couple of times to get to meet them. The fact that the dad spoke good English was really helpful in feeling confident in them, though it wasn't great for DS's French as he didn't need to use it that much. I think the French boy who came to ours probably got to improve his language skills more.

14 is the minimum age for travelling unaccompanied on easyjet by the way, I'm not sure about other airlines.

Report
mathanxiety · 21/11/2015 04:42

One of my sisters did one with a French student, back in the late 70s (whatever year 'Love is in the Air' was a hit). The girls were matched through an agency recommended by our school. DSis spent four weeks in France with the family and the French girl then came to Ireland for four weeks. We all got on so well that our two families got in touch and made the same arrangement the following year, bypassing the agency. The French family sent us pear schnapps and bergamot sweets and we sent Irish whiskey hidden in DSis's luggage, along with smoked salmon from Duty Free.

Otoh a girl in my year in school did a two week exchange with a French student and then spent two weeks in France. They weren't speaking to each other by the end of it.

Success depends on the personalities, I suspect.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

mathanxiety · 21/11/2015 04:42

One of my sisters did one with a French student, back in the late 70s (whatever year 'Love is in the Air' was a hit). The girls were matched through an agency recommended by our school. DSis spent four weeks in France with the family and the French girl then came to Ireland for four weeks. We all got on so well that our two families got in touch and made the same arrangement the following year, bypassing the agency. The French family sent us pear schnapps and bergamot sweets and we sent Irish whiskey hidden in DSis's luggage, along with smoked salmon from Duty Free.

Otoh a girl in my year in school did a two week exchange with a French student and then spent two weeks in France. They weren't speaking to each other by the end of it.

Success depends on the personalities, I suspect.

Report
mathanxiety · 21/11/2015 04:43

Sorry - double post, don't know what happened there

Report
AnaGonzalez · 14/11/2016 08:52

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.