World Challenge Expeditions
World Challenge | |
Headquarters | Crawley, West Sussex, |
Area served | United Kingdom |
Products | Travel Agent |
Owner | Travelopia, KKR |
Website | https://weareworldchallenge.com/uk |
World Challenge is a for-profit UK provider of overseas adventure travel programs targeted at schools. The company was founded when a young army captain took a team of soldiers on a training mission to the snow-capped Hindu Kush mountain range in Pakistan in 1985. He realised that the personal development and camaraderie learned there would shape the team for years to come. World Challenge was later born from this experience in 1988.
The company operates in North America, Australia, Middle East, South East Asia, and Europe. As a brand within the Travelopia Holdings Limited group, World Challenge is owned by KKR.[1]
Carbon Negative Trips
World Challenge are a climate positive student travel company, providing sustainable travel. They also produce an impact report every year which calculates their impact on the environment, students, local communities and projects.
Student-led expeditions of 1 to 4 weeks
Depending on the experience selected, the students are in charge of picking the destination and activities from curated lists. They also take it in turns to lead the trip and manage the budget, to empower and develop them outside of the classroom.
Journeys 1 to 2 weeks
A newer offering from World Challenge is the Journey product focusing on global citizenship and cultural literacy. Aside from being shorter, the focus is more on community engagement and some relaxation activities. Students have an opportunity to live and work in a local community as well as take a look around the destination they are in. The groups are led by local guides with leaders and teachers adding to the trip supervision.
Sports & Curriculum Tours
World Challenge Australasia offers sports and curriculum tours, covering subjects like Art, History, and Geography, as well as sports like cricket, rugby and netball.
The tours combine subjects or sports into a World Challenge style trip overseas.
Incidents
Vietnam 2001: In July 2001, a 17-year-old student from High Wycombe died after falling over 500m off a mountain whilst on a World Challenge expedition to Vietnam.[2] A report commissioned by Buckinghamshire County Council found the student fell after slipping on a tree root during a storm and her death was ruled to be an accident. Both Buckinghamshire Council and the student's parents criticized the planning and risk assessment of the climb up Mount Fansipan, Vietnam's highest peak, saying that the group leaders did not have any knowledge of the route and should have turned back when they found the route was more steep, exposed and treacherous than they had expected - something that multiple students on the trek had expressed unease about. World Challenge stated, however, that if the group leader "had known every track, it would be against the developmental process".[3]
South Africa 2008: In July 2008, a number of students from Wootton Bassett were swept out to sea whilst playing rugby on a beach near Durban, South Africa during the "Rest and Relaxation" portion of their trip. Their 24-year-old expedition leader, Sean Foxcroft entered the water to try and save them, but despite helping save all the students, he was dragged out to sea and presumed to have drowned.[4][5]
Morocco 2012: In July 2012, while trekking through the Moroccan Atlas Mountains, a 17-year-old student from Bexley collapsed as temperatures reached 40°C. No arrangements were made for an ambulance or medical transportation and instead, a minibus with no medical personnel arrived over an hour after the student's collapse to transport him to a hospital. The student died on the minibus.[6] At an inquest into the student's death, a teacher on the expedition claimed that a World Challenge ground agent that she had called for help during the incident had later told her; "You can’t say you had a guide because I could be held responsible and I could go to prison".[7] The inquest into the death ruled the cause as misadventure, resulting in dehydration or hyponatremia and criticised World Challenge for their inadequate emergency arrangements and providing inadequate and misleading information about fitness requirements.[8] The students' parents also criticised the company for its lack of fitness and health checks for participants.[9]
Ecuador 2017: In July 2017 a student at the Royal Grammar School, High Wycombe, died while white-water rafting on a World Challenge trip to Ecuador. The company then suspended all white water rafting activity while an investigation took place.[10][11]
Vietnam 2019: In September 2019 a student with Type 1 diabetes died after becoming ill on a World Challenge trip to Vietnam. A coroner's inquest in the students home country of Australia heard that World Challenge staff and teachers from the student's school failed to recognise the seriousness of his condition.[12]
References
- ^ "Tax Strategy". Travelopia. Archived from the original on 2019-04-11.
- ^ Branigan, Tania (2001-08-02). "Inquiry into death on school trek ruled out". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "New report blasts climb which led to Amy's death". Bucks Free Press. 2002-04-12. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Wootton Bassett school trip ends in tragedy". The Wiltshire Gazette and Herald. 2008-07-30. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ Disley, Jan (2008-07-28). "Hero British teacher swept away trying to save students in South Africa". The Mirror. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Teen Morocco Death: Parents Slam Trek Company". Sky News. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Teacher 'devastated' no ambulance came to rescue dying Bexley student on Morocco trek". News Shopper. 2014-01-08. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "Parents' scathing attack after teenager dies in sweltering Morocco heat". January 5, 2024.
- ^ "Morocco trek boy Samuel Boon's parents criticise World Challenge". BBC News. 2014-01-13. Retrieved 2024-07-19.
- ^ "'Lessons drawn' from pupil's Ecuador death". BBC News. August 14, 2017.
- ^ Karim, Fariha (August 11, 2017). "Matthew Hitchman death: Coroner had criticised adventure firm World Challenge before schoolboy died rafting". The Times.
- ^ Tran, Danny (November 13, 2022). "When Lachlan Cook died after a school trip, the 'world stopped' for his family. They are still fighting for answers". ABC News. Australia.
External links
- World Challenge UK Official Website
- World Challenge Australia Official Website
- ABS World Challenge: India 2016 A Challenger-made video summing up a month long expedition to North India