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    HomeTravel'Worldschooling' their 4-year-old child, this family has traveled to 23 countries so...

    ‘Worldschooling’ their 4-year-old child, this family has traveled to 23 countries so far in 2024

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    Carol Tan, Rakcent Wong and their son, Atlas, have traveled across 23 countries and counting since the start of 2024.

    Courtesy of Rakcent Wong

    “You won’t be able to travel anymore after having children.” Carol Tan, 36, and Rakcent Wong, 35, often received that advice before having their son, Atlas — but they were determined to prove the naysayers wrong.

    The Singaporean family took a sabbatical from work to “worldschool” their 4-year-old child and has traveled from Switzerland to Denmark to Nepal, across 23 countries since the start of the year.

    What is ‘worldschooling’?

    Simply put, “worldschooling” refers to making the globe one’s classroom.

    Sometimes, it involves parents who choose to embark on a “family gap year,” and take their children out of their hometown schools to introduce them to different parts of the world, helping them learn through immersive experiences.

    While some families take a more structured approach by enrolling their kids into schools abroad or by creating their own curriculum, along the lines of traditional homeschooling, others take a more flexible approach.

    Tan and Wong motorcycled across Southeast Asia.

    Courtesy of Rakcent Wong

    How the journey began

    After meeting in 2011, Tan and Wong fell in love and soon found a mutual passion for traveling.

    “Our style of traveling before we had Atlas was a little ‘off the beaten path’ type,” Wong told CNBC Make It. From going to Iceland on a camper van and motorcycling across Southeast Asia, to sleeping in the desert in Egypt and exploring a safari in Sri Lanka, the couple loved being adventurous in their travels.

    “We realized [that] after every trip, we always gained something — there’s some kind of growth and transformation that we experience, just both on a personal level and as a couple,” Wong said.

    If we put our child into preschool from morning to night, we are really losing out on the most amazing part of our child’s journey.

    Tan and Wong decided that they would not only continue to travel but bring Atlas along with them. “We [knew] that traveling is going to be so beneficial for him, especially in his formative years before he goes to primary school,” Wong said.

    “We feel that, as parents, if we put our child into preschool from morning to night, we are really losing out on the most amazing part of our child’s journey, because this is [where] they learn many of their firsts,” Wong said. “As a father, I want to be there, I want to see his firsts.”

    The couple decided that the best time to take the trip would be when their child was between the ages of 4 and 6. During these years, while he would be old enough to absorb the world, he would be too young to start formal primary school, which is compulsory in Singapore.

    4-year-old Atlas is on a worldschooling adventure with his parents.

    Courtesy of Rakcent Wong

    Atlas and the world

    The impact of ‘worldschooling’: ‘He has this drive to learn’

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