(AP) --Around the time her former high school classmates are
cracking college textbooks, Perrin Ireland will head to Honolulu, Hawaii, to
assist in a research project with dolphins.
While
they're brushing up for fall semester finals, Ireland plans to be in South
America, taking Spanish lessons. The end of their freshmen year will find
Ireland in Greece, studying Aegean art and creative writing.
It's what
the English call the "gap year," a traditional break between high
school graduation and college. Prince William took his three years ago; royal
Prince Harry began his gap year earlier this month.
And in
America, it's becoming more commonplace among students well-off enough to take
a year to indulge their interests.
"I
guess I'm really in no rush to be done with college," said Ireland, who
has put off the start of her education at Brown University. "So I figured
there was no harm to give myself an extra year to digest and explore."
Not only
are many colleges amenable to deferring admission for students like Ireland,
some -- such as Harvard University -- actually recommend a year off before
starting classes as a means to mature emotionally and intellectually.
"It's
not that people find themselves in a year and then walk off happily into the
sunset," said Gail Reardon, the owner of "Taking Off," a private
Boston-area counseling service that helps students, such as Ireland, plan
sabbaticals.
"But
it does start a process of learning skills and looking at yourself. It gives
you the maturity, self-esteem and independence to think outside the box. It's
an evolution."
Reardon,
the co-author of "Taking Time Off," said a gap year offers young
people the first flush of freedom from parents, minus the academic obligations
of higher education.
"For
me, college wasn't my first time without a curfew," said Colin Hall, who
backpacked through Africa before attending school in the late 1990s.
John
Bloch of Cincinnati, Ohio, an aspiring culinary arts major, is postponing his
freshman year to spend 10 months as an AmeriCorps volunteer teaching
underprivileged children, building homes for Habitat for Humanity and cutting
trails for the National Park Service.
"It's
just a personal choice of mine to help and support the country and learn more
about myself, the community I live in and the United States as a whole,"
he said.
For
students unable to raise the money, of course, skipping a year before starting
college isn't an option. Reardon acknowledged that the gap years she helps to
arrange attract "middle and upper class kids by virtue that it does cost
something."
Drew
Harry said the benefit of deferring his start at the Olin College of
Engineering could never be measured in monetary terms.
After a
year in Europe, Harry arrived at Olin's Needham, Massachusetts, campus last
fall more mature and eager to learn at an engineering school that opened its
doors just two years ago. Olin also encourages incoming students to take a year
off.
"It
made the college transition a lot easier," said the Providence, Rhode
Island-native. "I could focus more on academics because I was more
self-reliant. I could handle myself. I could get my laundry done and get
groceries and stupid things like that."
To
guarantee they'll still be able to attend the school of their choice, Reardon
and other counselors advise students taking a year off to go through the
admissions process prior to asking for a deferral.
Once that
deferral is granted, they suggest spending the year pursuing areas of interest
related to their college studies.
"I
always recommend, don't take a year off, take a year on," said John
Boshoven, a counselor in Ann Arbor, Michigan. "Don't count it as a year
that is separate from your life, but connect to what you want to do the rest of
your life."