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

Foreign Exchange Visits

56 replies

Sparklingbrook · 07/11/2013 09:47

Are they important? Do you have to have one if your child is studying the language and it is offered?
If DS doesn't do it will he be the only one?

OP posts:
Report
Sparklingbrook · 07/11/2013 23:35

Smile Yes. I feel slightly less panicked now. Teenagers eh?

OP posts:
Report
PetiteRaleuse · 07/11/2013 23:26

Plenty of time to book, distract him then build up to it then. sorry.

Report
Sparklingbrook · 07/11/2013 22:49

We're Worcestershire so plenty to see and do Petite. Perhaps I am over thinking as usual but DS can be a bit flakey as far as enthusiasm for things goes, and with it being 6 months away etc.....

OP posts:
Report
PetiteRaleuse · 07/11/2013 22:46

OP if your DS is showing even slight enthusiasm I would go for it. No angst needed. Where are you? Can you think of a couple of cheap but entertaining things you could do with a kid from abroad? That could even be a Sunday afternoon eating pub food (a lot of French kids would relish the idea of going to a proper British pub and/or eating proper fish n chips) and a country walk. Or, even, if you live in a big city, a walk through town at night so they can tell their friends that city centres in England are as crazy as they see on French TV (they'll probably tell their friends that they went clubbing and snogged a petite anglaise but that's just adolescent lying).

Ime when a French person, even a kid, goes to the uk they will be happy with seeing their stereotypes come alive, a walk by a river or sea and maybe some computer games or even reality tv shows like BGT or x factor, stuff we have over here. All else fails make them do sport, send your ds to the pool or football pitch or park with them. Really. They aren't all that different from us but maybe like a bit more physical activity. Ie walks/runs/swims or whatever.

Report
beafrog · 07/11/2013 22:43

I think exchanges are brilliant - best way to learn a language properly and your children learn as much in a week as they do in a year of lessons at school. My DC have done two and I wish they'd had the opportunity to do more - they've loved it.

Report
Eastpoint · 07/11/2013 21:55

We have a 12 year old staying with us at the moment. My DC will go back there next year. They seem to be getting on well, the schools have arranged activities for the visitors to do during the day & then they come home together. We have put them in the same room so it is less lonely. With the wonders of FaceTime they can be in touch with their family as much as they want & we have overheard descriptions of dinner being delicious (not intentionally). I would go for it.

Report
Sparklingbrook · 07/11/2013 21:43

Well it may not be a walk in the park for my family Sue. Sad Sorry for the angst but I have had some really helpful replies, and I am trying to decide what to do.

I am glad your DDs both had good experiences.

OP posts:
Report
LittleSiouxieSue · 07/11/2013 21:40

Both my daughters did an exchange with a South African school for a whole term! - and they travelled there and back without any parents. There were two girls selected from each year so they travelled together with the BA unaccompanied minors programme. I cannot believe the angst here about going to France and having someone back! Other girls travelled to Australia and New Zealand. My DD1 was 13 years 5 months when she went. It was a cultural exchange and we had a SA girl here for a whole term. Yes it takes some organisation but both my DDs thought it was a highlight of their young lives. Even the 'hard labour' punishment meted out to DD1 when her knicker drawer was found to be untidy in the boarding house has gone into folk lore here! Hard labour was getting up at 5 am in the morning to clean the toilets before school started. I am proud to say my DD took did it and earned respect as a result! A week in France is a walk in the park.

Report
Leeds2 · 07/11/2013 21:05

My DD did one to Spain in Year 10. Spanish girls came to school in England for one week, then English girls went back with them for a week. During the week in England, English girls went to lessons as normal and the Spanish girls went on coach trips to London, Bluewater (?) etc. So the girls were entertained during the day. We really only had to look after her for one weekend. In the evening, they seemed to play on the wii, or watch English films with Spanish subtitles!

Report
AphraBane · 07/11/2013 19:12

DD1 is currently doing a language exchange to France - for three months! She's 15, so a bit older than your DS Sparkling,, but she's also pretty shy, and we also don't have a spare room.

We also don't live in the UK (so it was a French-German exchange rather than French-British), and it's noticable that UK exchanges are both less common and not as long. A week is better than nothing, but it's a taster rather than a way of achieving real fluency.

The key components to success are:

  • Your DC really wants to do it (it's not your idea and they're reluctantly going along with it)
  • Both families make a real effort to make the guest child feel at home and understand that what may come across as 'sulkiness' might actually be teenage hormones combined with total shyness and difficulties with the language.


In our case, it was DD1's idea all along, and she's had to make a real effort to overcome her shyness, but (maybe as a consequence) we're immensely proud of what she's achieved. She's even in a different school year to her exchange partner (seconde rather than terminale) so she's had to go into a completely strange school group and do all her lessons in French. It's taught her a lot, not just in terms of language skills, but also self-confidence and independence.

Neither family (us and the exchange partner's family) have a spare room. In both cases the host children moved into a bedroom together and enabled the guest child to have a room to herself, which I do think is important. If you're in a 'strange' environment, it's nice to have a zone where you can have some privacy.

Both the girls also made a real effort to get to know each other beforehand, via Facebook. We also mailed with the other mother quite a bit to clear up issues like favourite foods, allergies, extra lessons, who pays for what. We achieved a real parity with what we 'offered' the other child - we took the French girl for two weeks to the Austrian Alps and southern Germany, and DD1 has just spent a week in Paris and a week on the Cote d'Azur (staying with friends rather than luxury hotels etc). I think there would have been a bit of bad feeling if one family had taken their guest on a brill holiday but the other family had done nothing nice or special - and that's about making an effort rather than spending oodles of money.
Report
Bonsoir · 07/11/2013 18:36

DSS2 had his exchange partner in his room, and he stayed in his exchange partner's room, on both occasions. DSS2 is not particularly fussed about comfort, however. I agree that exchange partners ought to be given the bed if there is a bed/futon issue and making an effort with food and generally trying to make the other child as comfortable as possible ought to be the norm, though Parisian parents are notoriously neglectful!

Report
absentmindeddooooodles · 07/11/2013 17:10

I went on one of these exchanges when I was 14. A german one. First time abroad. Very shy. Couldnt really afford it. No spare room. Tiny house. It was the only tripI went on Iin school. Really couldnt recommend it highly enough.
It was fab!

We kicked my brother out of his room for the week. Did some research on the kind of food the exchange student would like. Did very cheap day out at the weekend and generally carried on with normal life although on best behaviour! :)

Going over tjere was a brilliant experience for me. Came back and totally aced my german gcse!

I think if you can do it, then it will be a brilliant experience. Really worth doing.

Report
Sparklingbrook · 07/11/2013 17:03

Thanks for all the replies, It's so helpful to hear of others experiences, and I didn't realise some schools didn't even do them. Hurrah for DS1's untwatty Head.

We have been chatting about it, but not yet decided.

OP posts:
Report
BanjoPlayingTiger · 07/11/2013 16:32

I did this twice as a teenager. The first time I didn't get a lot out of it and didn't get on very well with my exchange partner, but the second time it was excellent. I am still friends with my exchange partner and we visited her last year as part of our summer holiday. We have now known each other for nearly 20years!
It is one of those things that you just have to do and hope for the best. I am really glad I did both of mine.

Report
starving · 07/11/2013 16:28

DD has done this twice, first time age 14 and then this year age 17. The school only offer it to these age groups. It gave her so much confidence in her spoken German. Fortunately she isn't a fussy eater and neither was her exchange so food wasn't a problem. Her school insist that the exchange person sleeps in a proper bed, so when exchange was here she had dds bed and dd slept on a futon in the same room. They wanted it that way because by then they were quite good friends. When dd went to Germany on both occasions she was offered her own room but declined it and was happy to go in same room as partner.

DD really enjoyed it and would recommend it to others

Report
PetiteRaleuse · 07/11/2013 15:43

How strange. I'd have thought staying with a family would be pretty much as safe as it gets.

Report
smugmumofboys · 07/11/2013 15:34

All other trips are fine, it's just exchanges. I'm taking fifty students to France next year and, as a school, we offer a wide range of visits all over the world.

Report
wordfactory · 07/11/2013 15:09

We were told not to worry about the students having their own room, and advisedf that our DC may have to share in France.

As it happened we have the space and DC both had their own rooms in France, but it was made clear this shouldn't be a problem.

Report
MLP · 07/11/2013 14:35

It's one week - it will pass. I think it is worth the "risk". I wouldn't worry about the lack of space. We often have out of town friends crash on the sofa/aero mattress.

Report
bachsingingmum · 07/11/2013 14:25

There are 7 years between my two, and for a while in between the school stopped them because of child protection concerns. DD1 did two organised ones, one to France (which went OK) and one to Germany which went brilliantly. She's still in regular contact with the German girl, and they organised their own personal exchanges afterwards. DD1 was so enthused she went on to study languages at uni and is now living and working in Germany and has a lovely German boyfriend.

With DD2 they have just restarted them and we recently welcomed a German 15 year old. They were good friends by the end of the week and she's looking forward to the German leg next June (sadly just after GCSEs).

I think the going to bed early thing has a lot to do with being exhausted after concentrating all day to understand and speak in a foreign language. I'd try to offer a separate room for that reason and explain to your DD/DS. Our experience with all of the girls we've had is that they were keen to try anything foodwise (marmite, English mustard, Yorkshire puds, tea with milk). We've never had any problem feeding them.

Report
Madmog · 07/11/2013 14:13

We had a French girl stay with us last year from and agency. It's the first time we've done it and we all felt it went really well. She fitted in totally with what we planned. I gave her a choice each time, ie chicken or salmon, macaroni cheese or spag bol, cheese or ham sandwich etc, and every time she said, I like both and eat the lot. She was ready for bed by 9pm school nights which fitted in roughly with our daughter who went to bed at 9.30pm.

I only know the French I can remember from secondary school, so there were times it was hard to explain. My daughter was at the end of Year 7 and she was brilliant, explaining in her own basic French what we had said and the girl then came back to us with an answer in English, so clearly understood what my daughter had tried to say. They spent a lot of time asking eachother how to say words in the other language, so I think both sides got a lot out of it. My daughter has been more interested in French since, I think she can see if could be useful after all. They now write to eachother, my daughter will put what she knows in French, but sometimes there are English sentences and the other girl always uses English.

I think the thing is not to worry about it too much and just go with the flow.

Report
euwa · 07/11/2013 14:09

I know what you mean sparklingbrook as we have managed to put exchanges off because DS is so shy and we really do not have space to put up someone else without DS sleeping on our sofa or our bedroom floor. I have heard from people whose DC really enjoyed it and others whose DC hated it or got nothing at all from it. Difficult decision.

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!

PetiteRaleuse · 07/11/2013 13:43

That is so sad. Is he like that for all school trips or just trips to furrin parts?

Report
smugmumofboys · 07/11/2013 13:12

His twattishness is a whole other thread Petite.

I think there is such a reluctance to take risks due to changes in parental expectations and the possibility of legal action is something goes awry.

It's a huge shame but not an isolated viewpoint, sadly.

Report
MaddAddam · 07/11/2013 13:06

I did 4 between the ages of 13 and 17 (France and Germany, 2 weeks at a time) and had some up and down experiences but it was a huge help in learning the languages. Now I'm trying to arrange them for my 13 and 12 year olds, their school might do them higher up the school but not in years 9 and 8, and I'm keen to get them started so I'm arranging them independently.

My dc are quite keen, but I'd send them anyway as I think learning a language is important enough to merit a bit of social awkwardness.

Report
Please create an account

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