This summer has been full of travel adventures. I spent most of those days teaching English at a summer camp called Angloville. In this blog post, I’ll be sharing stories and reviewing my experience and giving you my opinion on whether this might be right for you. Keep on reading if you want to read my review and stories from camp.
What is Angloville?
You might have seen advertisements for Angloville on Facebook, Instagram, GoOverseas, Workaway, Helpx, or even Couchsurfing. They typically target young backpackers looking for a cheap way to travel around Europe and get some work experience in teaching English as a Second/Foreign Language (TEFL).
In their advertisements they mention how you’ll get six days of free accommodation and food in a 3 or 4 star hotel in the countryside of various Central European countries with a tagline like “Come and see Europe for free for 3-4 weeks.” Does that sound too good to be true? Well yeah, but I’ll explain that later in the post. Because there are a lot of catches and perhaps some slight exaggeration.
They frame it as volunteering, but let me dispel that. Angloville are not a charity. They are a for-profit company and families pay anywhere between β¬1000-1500 for their children to go to a week long camp. In a camp, there are a handful (often less than I can count on one hand) of paid staff and usually about 20 volunteers (mentors), often less. If the camp has too few mentors, good luck because youβll be doing a lot more work. Instead, Iβd recommend thinking of your time at Angloville like being a camper. However, if youβre doing the programme in London there is a lot more work and responsibility involved. Basically, think about if the accommodation and food for the week is worth it for the time you give.
So how is this legal? Angloville set up a non-profit called Fundacja RozwΓ³j Bez Granic (Development Without Borders Foundation) that provides the βvolunteer opportunitiesβ. You can find this information on the website under their Terms & Conditions agreement. This isnβt top secret.
Programmes with Angloville run year round, so if summer isn’t convenient for you, you can do a programme in the spring, winter, or autumn. Programmes can run as short as 3 days or as long as 11 days. From 8 or 9 AM until 9 or 10 PM, you’re talking all day long to the participants, or language learners.
Most of the day, youβre talking to the participants, sometimes by themselves, but most of the time with a group of them, 2 or 3 participants. I find the one on one discussions are good because itβs easier to focus, but the participants have to talk more and they may not like that. The problems with the group speaking sessions are you can get students with way different levels of English, someone always ends up getting left out, and students have different interests. It can be interesting though because students can learn from each other and they can help each other understand English better. Often, students will translate the question in their native language to each other if they donβt understand.
When you have these speaking sessions, you can talk about whatever you want. Angloville provide cue cards, but the campers get really bored with them and want to talk about something more interesting.
If youβre lucky, the venue may have some games you can play during speaking sessions. These were a godsend because they helped the time pass more quickly and the campers enjoyed the games. Conversation during games is a lot more natural.
For a couple of hours a day there are group activities, but if you do multiple programmes youβre going to be bored because they play the same games at pretty much every camp: werewolves, stop the bus, do you like your neighbour, bingo, etc. Volunteers can suggest their own games and activities, and this is encouraged on the domestic programmes because there is so much time because youβre at the venue pretty much the entire time, bar a half day field trip.
Participants on the junior programme are between the ages of 12 and 19. Their level of English varies and you donβt get any information on what level of English each of the participants are. You just find out when you talk to them. Theyβre supposed to have at least a CEFR B1 level of English, but there were many participants who spoke very little or even no English. I guess that doesnβt matter because Anglovilleβs got to make money somehow. I find that students get the most benefit when they at least have a level of English where they can have a basic conversation.
You only get an hour and a half of free time a day and itβs really not enough because the days are really long. I wouldnβt even call the mealtimes breaks because youβre expected to talk to the campers during meal time. Whether that happens, depends on your co-ordinator. As an introvert, I was left exhausted after each programme. Felt like I was on Birthright all over again, but with not very nice food and I have to do work.
Once a week on the domestic programmes (the ones in Poland, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Hungary, and Romania), there is a field trip, but for the most part, youβre stuck at the hotel and you canβt leave because thereβs nowhere to go. Youβre a captive audience. The only fun thing to do at night was stargazing because we were away from civilisation, therefore no light pollution.
Act I: Hotel Excelsior – Czech Republic
Iβll talk more about the journey to the Czech Republic and what I did in Prague in a later blog post, but in this post, Iβll be talking about the Angloville part of the trip.
Angloville arenβt the most organised company, so be prepared to send follow up emails and copy supervisors and the general contact email. I noticed this early on when I was submitting my documents like background check, European Health card, reference letter from employer, passport scan, and itinerary that the emails wouldnβt always arrive. They will also send a lot of newsletters that clog your inbox and even occasionally call you on WhatsApp about doing another programme at an understaffed resort.
Super annoying because I live in Ireland, removed from Continental Europe. Iβm not a Flixbus or train ride away from the departure cities – I canβt get there last minute. This must have been super annoying for the volunteers from overseas because they planned their return flights way in advance. What incentive is there to volunteer more? You only need to volunteer in three programmes to get your TEFL certification for free basically. They wonβt pay for your transport or hostel nights before and after.
But this wasnβt the biggest problem I ran into in my communications with Angloville.
When I signed up for the programme in March, I was told that the programme at the Excelsior would be departing out of the nearby city of Ostrava, near the Polish and Slovak borders. Angloville also organise a walking tour of the departure city, so we would see something in Ostrava.Β Grand, so Iβll book my train ticket from Prague to Ostrava and book an Airbnb there.
Sometime between March and early July, they changed the departure city to Prague and notified us on the intro to the programme email that we will be taking a train to Ostrava and getting a bus. I got this email while I was in Manchester with my husband, just one week before I go to Prague. Letβs just say I was cheesed off. Thankfully most of what I booked was refundable bar small service fees, but Iβm annoyed because Angloville misled me and a bunch of other people and didnβt give us much time to rebook stuff, so I was in a scramble. Luckily things worked out transport/lodging wise in the end. Thereβs really nothing to see in Ostrava anyway.
Since there were a lot of programmes departing from Prague on the same day, our walking tour had a big group. It was great to meet people from different countries and from different walks of life. Some people were backpacking across Europe (and even the world) for the summer and some wanted a short break. I donβt know how people backpack for months at a time. I was exhausted after a couple of weeks. I definitely appreciate being at home with my husband and my cat.
Pictures from the walking tour
After the short walking tour of Old Town and the Jewish Quarter, we went for lunch at a restaurant. I went with another volunteer to Petrin. We walked around the park and took an uphill train and I saw this space museum/observatory place and we went there. It was right around the 50th anniversary of the Moon Landing so there were exhibits related to that. The coolest part though was looking out the telescope and because it was daytime we couldnβt see the stars, but we could look at Petrin Tower.
Space!
Now letβs talk about the meeting point. The central train station is in a very annoying location, especially for pedestrians. There are hardly any zebra crossings and there are limited underground pedestrian walkways to cross. Itβs even more of a pain when you have a lot of bags. Thankfully, they gave me a contact number and I called that when I was confused about the meeting point. I didnβt look that stupid because there were others who were confused.
The train ride was 3 hours long and went smoothly. Most of the time, I was talking to other volunteers. The trains are modern and have outlets and WiFi, which is handy.
When we arrived in Ostrava, we get put on this old bus to the hotel. I sat next to a funny group of people and laughed a lot on the way there. While on the bus, we were notified that there is not enough room for everyone in the main hotel building, so some of us were going to be roomed in a sister hotel a few kilometres away from the main hotel.
We dubbed this sister hotel, βThe Shedβ because we joked about how weβre going to be thrown into a shed. In actuality, the hotel was a bit old, but it was liveable. The biggest annoyance is that there was only one shuttle in the morning and one in the evening so you needed to bring everything you need for the day with you. A popular thing to do during free time was take a nap, but we couldnβt take naps because it was too far away. We also had to get up earlier than everyone else to account for the shuttle.
There were a couple advantages. My favourite one was that people in The Shed bonded and became friends. Weβd chat in the shuttle, at breakfast, and hang out in each otherβs rooms. The other advantage and it comes close to the friendship was having two breakfasts, one at The Shed and one at the main hotel. Not much of an advantage though when youβre vegan, but thatβs something we will address.
This camp was my first impression of Angloville and it left me with a sour taste for many reasons. Let me count the reasons.
The Hotel
The hotel is in a rural part of the Czech Republic that doesnβt get a lot of foreign tourists, therefore the staff donβt need to know any other languages and menus and signs arenβt in other languages. They also have little understanding of what vegan and vegetarian mean. This is understandable, but the second bit annoys me. People forgo meat and other animal products for many reasons and it can make someone sick if they get served animal products. We were promised vegan options and while I wasnβt expecting Michelin Star quality, the food was poor quality. It must have really sucked for the kids whose families paid a pretty penny for this camp.
Itβs fine for the local participants, but itβs not convenient for us, the mentors. If we have a problem, we would have to talk to a local Czech co-ordinator or a participant and have them translate for us. You feel vulnerable. Definitely makes me want to consider teaching English somewhere where at least I can understand the language and I luckily have some good options since I understand Spanish well and I can read basic French. Iβd be better off than a lot of TEFL teachers because many of them only know English. Thereβs no similarity between English or Romance languages and Slavic languages, so I felt lost and dumb, just like when I was in Israel. Here is an accurate depiction of me travelling in Central Europe and Israel:
Now I know how my Venezuelan family feel when they travel to America.
The staff were definitely annoyed having to deal with us. I canβt blame them. It takes a lot of patience.
The rooms were a bit old and small, but I canβt really complain because this beats staying at a hostel. I wish they offered single rooms for volunteers, but I know why they donβt, because that would cost them a lot of money and as I said earlier, they are for profit and theyβll cut corners where they can.
The biggest complaint I have about this hotel and the one in Poland (but this complaint applies to a lot of the other venues) is the slow, unreliable WiFi, and oftentimes poor mobile reception. It really felt like I was off the grid and not in a good way. Because of the poor WiFi, we couldnβt have a movie night and we couldnβt make Kahoot quizzes. A lot of students request if they can make Kahoot quizzes for their presentations, and in most of the venues it isnβt possible because of the bad WiFi.
The Staff
In Angloville, the co-ordinators and other staff will make or break your programme. Our native speaker co-ordinator was not the friendliest or most approachable and he didnβt seem like he knew what he was doing or even cared about us or the participants. He wasnβt much of a leader either. He was a good example of how not to be an Angloville co-ordinator. Reminded me of Squidward. I have a feeling he was inexperienced and I heard somewhere that they donβt get much training before they lead a programme.
Every day, we had staff meetings, but it was basically just gossip and not much was accomplished. We really should have been giving each other feedback, advice, and rating the participantsβ English.
The local co-ordinator looked at us vegans as if we were whiny and entitled. At one point, he asked one of them why canβt they eat dairy for the week. Really? Did it ever occur to him that some people have allergies or are just grossed out by animal products?
I understand that itβs a poorly paid job, but they represent the company. Some important qualities to have are: friendliness, passion, good leadership abilities, good listening skills, and kindness. Talking to other people at other Anglovilles, no one had anything nice to say about this staff member.
The Food
This has to be my biggest complaint. If youβre a vegan, or even a vegetarian, do not do an Angloville programme at the Excelsior. The food was abysmal. So bad that in order to cheer ourselves up, we made memes about it. Those who arenβt vegetarian and donβt have food allergies take food for granted, like you donβt think about it. Like βAm I going to be able to eat this?β
Just a few of the memes volunteers and mentors made. I made a few of these (the dumpster one, the cheesy boi vs me one, and the upgrade one at the bottom)
Here are a couple choice meals that us vegans had: chips and broccoli, cheesy pasta (yup, served to us by accident), and these depressing looking crepes that may or may not have been vegan.
The night we vegans had the crepes and everyone else had these sort of sweet dumpling looking things for dinner (Really? Dessert for dinner? Even the Czech participants thought it was weird), we were dissatisfied. All of the volunteers got together and lobbied the Angloville staff to order us some delivery because this was ridiculous. Everyone was left hungry and the hotel stopped serving food for the day. Since we are in the middle of nowhere, it was slim pickings. The only delivery place nearby was a pizza restaurant, of course, and that means once again nothing for vegans. I was desperate and really hungry. Days of eating inadequate food piles up and I didnβt want to go to bed on a grumbling stomach, so I sat in the hotel basement with all the volunteers and ate chips and pizza crusts. I tried my best to avoid cheese and I thought sure it will be fine…
I went back to the hotel room and fell asleep, but not for long. When I get the stomach flu or food poisoning, I run back and forth between the bed and the toilet for a few hours and then I throw up. Iβm thinking I got sick for a few reasons. Eating traces of dairy, which Iβm lactose intolerant and it must have gotten worse since going vegan, and eating mushrooms, Iβm allergic to certain types and didnβt think my allergy was that bad. That happened mid-way through the programme and I had to take the most important day off, the day before presentations, the capstone project of this weeklong camp. I was supposed to help the two students on their Beatles presentation and I couldnβt because I was too sick and weak. I was sick for the remainder of the programme, which put a damper on everything. I couldnβt even be there for my studentsβ presentation because I was too weak to sit through everyoneβs presentations and since their presentation was towards the end, it was bad luck for them.
One of the days I was sick, a group of volunteers wanted to go hiking in the morning and the surroundings were beautiful. I couldnβt go because I was sick. The field trip, which was on the last day was a hiking trip with lunch. Again, I could not go because I was sick.
These were pretty much the only good pictures I got of the hotel
Never once was I taken to a doctor even when I asked a staff member. All they did for me was give me medication and they sent someone to check on me once in a while. I was stuck in the hotel room all day with nothing to do except watch whatever episodes of Stranger Things I had downloaded to my iPad. Remember how I said this camp cuts corners? There was no nurse at this overnight camp. I went to an arts camp as a teenager that cost about the same as Angloville and they had a nurse there throughout the duration of the camp, theyβd be responsible for giving the campers their medications and caring for any injured or sick campers.
Imagine not having your nutritional needs met and you have to work 12 hour days. Youβd feel like shite. Food is a basic human need. Vegan food isnβt hard to figure out. Just give me a salad bar, fresh fruit and veg, nuts, seeds, rice, and some beans and Iβm good. Iβm not that high maintenance. This other vegan girl and I had to beg the local Angloville Czech staff to get the hotel to buy us some soy milk and vegan yoghurt. Thank goodness there were two other vegans on the programme or we wouldnβt have gotten some crumbs.
I was feeling so miserable that I was considering not going to the programme in Poland because I was worried about the food situation and I didnβt want to get anyone sick. When I called the main office about getting a doctorβs note, skipping one of my programmes, and still getting my deposit back, they said that wasnβt possible and they didnβt offer any solution or option beyond do the programme you were assigned and get your deposit back or donβt and lose your money.
Even Birthright gave me back my deposit (and it was a $250 deposit, not β¬70) and I left mid-way for health reasons. Angloville will make a big point about how you need insurance, but for what if they wonβt take you to the doctor and wonβt give your deposit back if you get sick, through no fault of your own. What a slap in the face and a demonstration of how little they care for their volunteers.
Itβs ridiculous and this leads to people getting other people sick and you donβt perform to your fullest potential. The deposit isnβt hundreds of euro, but still for me and a lot of other people, every euro counts. It makes me question how this company treats paid employees.
What prevented me from going crazy
This camp overall was awful, but there were a few saving graces and a few things that helped me tough it out. I loved talking to my fellow volunteers and it was so much fun having that loud techno dance party in the pool and sitting in the sauna and talking. Big shoutout to Donny, Tara from Ireland, Sara, Sam, Adrian, Maggie, Hampton, Cat, Rita, Ed, and Kit. Thanks to you all, it brightened my day talking to all of you. Especially The Shed crew, you were all great.
It may sound weird, but I need to thank the stars for saving me. My hotel room had a balcony and when we had a clear night, I loved going out there to see a sky full of stars. It was magical.
Act II: – Modrzewiowe WzgΓ³rze – Poland
Getting There
I took an overnight train from Prague to Krakow and that took about 8 or 9 hours. It was confusing figuring out the numbering of the train carriages and where I’d be seated, but I ended up figuring it out. The seat reclined a decent bit, well enough so I could sleep curled up in a ball and there was an outlet nearby so I could charge my phone. On the way there, I was listening to Brian Eno’sΒ ApolloΒ album andΒ Kraftwerk’s Trans Europe Express andΒ AutobahnΒ albums to help pass the time.
I had a couple hours in Krakow before I had to catch the bus to the venue. The bus to this venue was much newer and had air con, thank goodness!
The Accommodation
Itβs common to talk about what other programmes youβre doing in your Angloville stint, and this programme was hard to talk about. I mean, look at the name. Same energy as Grzegorz BrzΔczyszczykiewicz? Close enough. Itβs a flex to pronounce that name or the name of the hotel. That is all the jokes Iβll be making about the Polish language for now, because I got to talk about this programme.
This programme was much better than the last one for multiple reasons, but it still wasnβt perfect. I think this hotel has a better reputation than the Excelsior, not a difficult accomplishment, but still not one of the better Angloville hotels. But since this was my second programme I didnβt know what a good programme was.
Some pictures of “the shed”
Once again, I got placed in βthe shedβ and that nickname is more apt here. Where I stayed was a haunted looking cabin. It was old, dusty, not well lit, had few power outlets, and it looked like people were living here and abandoned the place. It was still fun to explore. You can find pictures of Pope John Paul II and family photos. There were some positives about the place. There was a full kitchen for… I donβt know what exactly since we donβt have any leftovers. I guess putting water bottles in the fridge so they can be chilled. The best thing though was for the most part, everyone had their own room. My room had a balcony and a couple times Iβd go out there to look at the forest. The annoying part was the cabin was a short walk away, and very slippy, especially if it rained, but the nice part was seeing the cats that lived on the property, and they were cute!
I literally spent half my time jumping on the trampoline.
There was more stuff to do at the hotel. We had board games, trampolines, swimming pools, pool and foosball tables, a piano, and volleyball courts. A lot more space to walk around and we were the only people staying at the hotel, no other guests. So that was nice.
The trampolines were my favourite amenity and there were so many campers who could do flips and there were two competitive gymnasts, really talented bunch we had at this camp. Youβd often hear the kids playing piano, songs like the Star Wars theme, Dancing Queen, Old Town Road, and Bad Guy being played. We didnβt have a lot of opportunities to use the pool though. We could only use the pool in the evening and most of the time we were too exhausted to use it. The pool was cold, the room it was it would get stuffy at times, and the small pool in the same room that I mistakenly thought was a hot tub was nasty. There was a spider in there. That definitely turned me off from swimming again. There was an outdoor pool, but we never used it. Most often, we were in the oldest, most boring looking parts of the hotel.
Some pictures of the hotel itself
Obligatory Food Rant
The food and drinks were a lot better than at the previous programme. We had more actual vegan options, non-dairy milk available to us at all times, tea available all day, and a buffet for breakfast and dinner so you can take as much food as youβd like. At the Excelsior, I was often left hungry, but here I felt more full and didnβt feel malnourished. The food itself wasnβt gourmet, but it was edible enough, what Iβd expect for camp food.
Apple pasta and pierogi
Iβm not going to act like a princess. Some of the dishes were weird, like apple pasta. Apparently, the campers said it was totally normal in Poland (or maybe they were taking the piss and I couldn’t tell), but for me, I expect pasta to be savoury, not sweet, so it was jarring to eat. Could be worse though, because the previous week at that camp, they served strawberry pasta and I didnβt hear good things about it.
The other issue I had with the food is the menu was posted on the main information board for the camp, but only in Polish. Why no bilingual menu? They really should be letting those with dietary needs know what will be served.
I thought this was an English immersion camp. Luckily, there was always someone around who could translate. Sometimes the staff wouldnβt make clear what was or wasnβt vegan. Especially the soups or mashed potatoes, and I wasnβt willing to chance it and possibly get sick.
Field Trip???
In this camp, we had a field trip in the middle of the week, to a place called Rock Town or something like that. Just a slippy walking/hiking trail where you walk by a bunch of rocks and no really scenic views. Thereβs supposed to be a bunch of bats living around there, but we didnβt see any. The bats would have been the most interesting thing about it.
Pictures from Rock Town
Frankly, I wish I didnβt go hiking there because it was so dull that later on we were making jokes about it. The weather wasnβt great either so that made it worse. There was nothing enriching about this field trip. I wish we could have gone to a lake, water park, museum, cultural village, or something like that instead. Heck, even an arcade, go kart track, roller disco, or bowling alley would have been more fun. Thereβs bound to be something like that in the area at least. We werenβt that far from Krakow.
The people
What really made the camp enjoyable were some of the volunteers with interesting and unique stories and our co-ordinator, Colten. Before I arrived at this camp, I heard great things about Colten. He has experience teaching English overseas, heβs passionate and enthusiastic about what he does, heβs funny, he knows what heβs doing, and he genuinely cares about the volunteers and campers. He was great about giving us extra free time so I didnβt feel like this camp was as hectic as the other two.
Not gonna lie, the cats were my favourite part of Angloville.
Naturally, people can get a bit cliquey, even past secondary school and this was the camp where I felt most excluded. Itβs just luck of the draw of who is there. Iβm just some weird 25 year old girl who likes vintage clothing and classic rock and most of the volunteers are a good bit younger than me, have different interests, and are in a different place in life.
At this one, there were a good few people who came to volunteer with other people and itβs harder to make friends that way. There was also a big group of campers who have known each other for a few years because of Angloville and they keep going to camp together year after year.
I didnβt feel like I belonged anywhere and I felt like an annoyance. Most free times were spent working on my Woodstock post. This isnβt the fault of Angloville by the way. This could happen anywhere. Iβm an introvert and I donβt know if this experience was a good fit for me because I barely had time to myself to recharge. Iβm also not one to ask for accommodations or anything because I have Aspergers. I try to be a trooper.
What I liked
My favourite activities overall was the bonfire and the Analogue Jackbox Quiz that a really cool volunteer named Robert came up with. For that game, he came up with a few Quiplash prompts that different teams would answer and the team with the best answer won points. The bonfire was awesome even if I couldnβt eat anything because all they had were marshmallows and sausages. They promised veggie sausages, but they didnβt have any. It was a beautiful, clear night and I sat down in this reclining chair, looking at the Milky Way, listening to space themed songs like βSpace Oddityβ, β39β, and βRocket Manβ. What an amazing feeling.
Bonfire and the outdoor pool and view of the hills
Overall, it was great to have done this experience and it felt good that campers were asking me about my blog. Some of them even took the time to read some posts. It feels good that the campers felt such a positive impact from this experience. They were sad to be leaving at the end.
Drawings a mentor did of two of my favourite animals: penguin and hedgehog
Act III: – University of Roehampton – London
What’s an international programme?
This is one of the international programmes. There are four of them, the others being Colchester, University of Essex; Dublin, DCU; and Lija,Β Malta University Residence. These programmes are very popular among volunteers and theyβre different from the other Angloville programmes because they are typically longer and they have more field trips. I mean, the families pay a lot more for this so youβd hopeΒ that the kids get their moneyβs worth. Another difference is that the campers come from multiple countries, in the case of this camp, mostly Poland, with a group of nine campers from France.
One thing that I wasnβt aware of until right before the camp was that because we have these field trips, we donβt have a city tour the day before camp and because London has good public transport, we donβt have a bus picking us up. You have to make your own way to Roehampton. This was a bit annoying, as thereβs no tube nearby and youβll likely have to switch buses. I got lucky that from where I was staying, in South Kensington near the museums, there was a bus that took you straight to Roehampton. Thank goodness because I had a really big bag and many of the stations donβt have lifts or escalators.
Some pictures of Whitelands College
The really nice thing about this programme is everyone gets their own room with an ensuite bathroom. Thank goodness! I definitely treasured the little downtime alone in my room, as much as I loved talking to everyone. Iβm glad that this time, I wasnβt put in βthe shedβ because during the few free time slots we had, I took a nap.
Right, about free time. The schedule for this particular programme was way more packed than the other programmes I did, so we didnβt get free time every day. A couple of the days we were in the city the whole day, therefore no time to unwind. Also, one isn’t supposed to work for 9 days every day non stop. I really wish we were able to have more relaxed days or even just a day off. Of course the paid staff got days off, theyβre supposed to, I mean if they donβt then thatβs a real violation of labour law. But us lowly volunteers? No day off. You had some freedom to leave during downtime, but youβre too tired at the end of the day to do that anyway. All I had energy to do was go to the nearby Greggs and nearby Co-op.
We would get back to Roehampton, have a couple minutes to put stuff away, and go straight into an activity that used a lot of brain power. Just… why? It makes people stressed and camp is supposed to be about having a good time and itβs important for staff to be considerate and conscientious of how people are feeling. There is a bit of freedom to move scheduled activities around.
Disorganised at times
There were times I didnβt look forward to going to the city. These field trips could have been better organised. I understand that we didnβt have the budget to hire a coach, but we were sometimes taking public transport at rush hour. The whole group of staff, volunteers, and campers were around 55 to 60 people. This made taking public transport hard even at off-peak times. I could tell that locals and tourists were annoyed. The walking tours were really rushed too. At least people got their Instagram snaps right? It didnβt feel like I was really in London and immersing myself in it because as volunteers we were responsible for the campersβ safety.
What could have been done better was explaining to everyone what would be happening better, give people ideas of things to do since for some people it was their first time in London, maybe breaking up into small groups, not travelling at peak times, making the time in the city about fun and being more relaxed, and having meeting points that were not in crowded areas. We really should have only full day field trips, not half day. Peak times can be so crazy and to make the time more relaxed for everyone we could have given people extra shopping or leisure time
The other thing that was disorganised was the presentations. At the end of Angloville, every student has to give a presentation either by themselves or in a group and we went way over time. What could have been done better was having time limits, signals for when time is almost up, and making sure all the presentations were properly queued up. Some presentations like the Kahoot quizzes took way too long, making it unfair for others who may not have had adequate time to give their presentation. The presentation is each kidβs time to shine and something they created that they can be proud of.
What really made the programme for me was talking to people. This is the first time I could say that I genuinely liked all the volunteers and I have nice things to say about everyone. The staff tried their best to organise a good programme and I think it was mostly good. Could use some improvements, but I think that itβs more the corporate officeβs flaws like creating the schedule. The campers had some interesting stories, hobbies, and interests and there were so many bright, talented kids. The two campers I was mentoring did their presentation about climate change and they had an interest in the environment and cultures from around the world.
I want to thank these really awesome volunteers for really making this trip an enjoyable one: Bethany, Max, Smilla, Alicia, Carlene, Elica, Bisma, May, and Valentine. I loved chatting late at night in the common room in the dorm. It was great getting to know everyone and for those I didnβt mention, I wish I could have gotten to know you better. Iβm really sorry for being a shy ball of social ineptitude.
The other thing that really made this camp great was the departmental cat. Donβt know the catβs name but it was so cute.
The Field Trips
Since there wasnβt much information on what to expect on Angloville at Roehampton since I believe this is the first one held there, Iβm going to share what you do on the field trips, if youβre interested in choosing this Angloville location for volunteer work. The landmarks we see are divided into different areas: West End/Westminster, South Kensington and Harrods, Thames Cruise and Greenwich, and Tower Bridge/Tate Modern/Thames walking tour.
Going on these field trips felt like Birthright all over again (except on Birthright we had a coach): large groups, people with different interests, gotta keep an eye on everyone, and thereβs always a straggler. You get a packed lunch, which usually isnβt good. The Tofurky sandwich in the vegan meal is fine, but I almost always bought something to supplement it. Your Oyster Card for the week is fully paid for.
You truly donβt get to see London, so if youβre volunteering and this is your first time in London, take a few days to see it on your own. Itβs such a big city and thereβs always something new every time you visit.
Our first field trip was a walking tour from Piccadilly Circus (we breezed right past this because itβs basically a photo stop) to the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey. Along the way, we saw Leicester Square (really just a photo stop), Pall Mall, St Jamesβs Palace, Buckingham Palace, St Jamesβs Park, 10 Downing Street, and Trafalgar Square. Our tour guide was nice, but super chatty and when we got to Trafalgar Square he was talking and then suddenly, a downpour and we all had to run and take cover. My favourite part of the day was Max telling stories about living in London and going to secondary school there.
Our second field trip was the Thames cruise to Greenwich. This was a real highlight and I took so many amazing pictures, including a Polaroid of the Tower Bridge. What I really liked was the narration done by a crew member, he did a great job and I found his jokes funny. Along the way we saw The London Eye, the Millennum Bridge, Tower of London, HMS Belfast, Canary Wharf, Isle of Dogs, and Cutty Sark. We got off at Greenwich and we didnβt have nearly enough time there. We walked around and went to this park, but couldnβt see the observatory because itβs crowded.
The other scheduled activity in the city was Oxford Street for shopping and to get there we took a boat cruise back and then took a bus. Itβs not efficient. Why the scenic route? Weβve already seen all the landmarks. It would have been much faster to take the tube or DLR. Or why didnβt they have the shopping somewhere else like the Westfield in White City? Itβs less crowded.
The timing was also not great because it was a Sunday and it was Eid al-Adha, so it would be extremely crowded and busy. I would have rather moved the shopping to another one of the half days (which should be a full day) and just spent more time in Greenwich. Itβs a part of London I didnβt really visit before, besides going to the British Music Experience at the O2, back in 2010.
While accompanying my mentees, who love makeup and Lush, they showed me this really cool glittery silver diamond highlighter Rihanna has in her line, Fenty Beauty. I really want it, but not for $40. If Iβm buying it, it would have to be on sale. I showed my two mentees this one vegan allergen free ice cream shop called Yorica and they really enjoyed it.
Gotta love ice cream!
The third field trip was a walking tour from the Tower of London to the Tower Bridge to the Borough Market to the Tate Modern. The day was sunny and beautiful, the perfect day to take postcard quality photos of London and boy did I take advantage of that. The market was really cool and had a nice variety of food. Iβm so glad I took a walk around there and saw this vegan Indian food stall where I bought a bhaji and a samosa and I saw this reasonably priced coffee stand called Change Please, which employ homeless people and help them get back on their feet, a really good cause. The Tate Modern wasnβt my favourite museum and it seemed like it wasnβt a lot of peopleβs cup of tea. Modern art isnβt for everyone.
Our last day of field trips was fun because we went to South Kensington to where the museums are. To the programmeβs credit, they allowed us to split up and go to the museums we wanted to see. We ended up going to the Natural History Museum, my favourite there. A few went to the Science Museum, which I thought was okay, Boaty McBoatface is there and thereβs a space exhibit and some went to the V&A, which is really nice. Earlier, I went to the Mary Quant exhibit there, which was really cool.
After the museums, we spent a really short amount of time at Harrods. I spent the entire time like wow this is absolute notions, and while we were there, Max, Alicia, and I talked to a friendly employee about how to get a job there and she asked us what programme we were doing. Max nearly knocked over like Β£50,000 worth of figurines, but luckily we were okay. Apparently, the best deal there is croissants for 80p. Still sounds a bit expensive to me. You can get the same thing at Tesco or Lidl for way less.
This is what we call in Ireland: Absolute Notions
To finish off the programme, we all went to a musical, Wicked. Teenage meβs dream come true. I was kind of into theatre when I was a teenager. I remember begging my parents to take me to Wicked and they said no because of the cost and because going to New York is expensive. At least I got to see it and I appreciate it more now that Iβm 25. The annoying thing was there were some brattyΒ tweens (not from our programme) behind us making noise and putting their feet on our seats and the parents didnβt care. Iβd be upset if I were their parents, spending hundreds of pounds on a nice family outing only for the kids to be inconsiderate and ruin it for other people. Even my kitten, Bowie, is better behaved.
In all the times Iβve been to London, I never went to a musical or West End show, itβs too much money. So it was really nice that Angloville paid for all of us to go see the show and give everyone a really nice memory. This show was definitely a highlight.
Final Thoughts
In case you donβt have the time to read this in depth, honest, unfiltered review of Angloville, Iβll leave you with a summary and some main takeaways.
What I liked
My favourite things were talking to people, meeting fellow English speakers from around the globe from different walks of life, learning from the young campers, seeing all the different sights, and stargazing. It was a great way to extend my trips to these places and not have to spend much money really for the week. I like how this was the cheapest way to get my TEFL certificate and it came with some great experiences. The idea of the programme being more about conversation than about traditional book learning was good.
I donβt regret doing Angloville at all. If I had to make the decision all over again knowing what I know now, Iβd pick different camps and have a different mindset going in and I think that would make it a better experience. I definitely feel like my confidence is higher because I did this programme and it helped me get out of my comfort zone.
A little advice: if you have your heart set on a programme that is completely booked and you live within Europe, consider waiting until the last minute and seeing if there are any drop outs. There are often no shows because the deposit is relatively low and some people decide not to do Angloville anymore.
What could be improved
Itβs a lot of work for not enough reward. We did get accommodation and food for the week, but I wish we had subsidised travel or a small stipend. Deposits should be fully refundable. I know they say that Paypal take their cut, but itβs not β¬15 worth of fees. Perhaps they could switch to a payment service that take a lower cut than PayPal.
I noticed that now they indicate which programmes have vegan and vegetarian food options and this would have been helpful if they had this information back when I was signing up.
I also wish it was more clear how to get a reference from Angloville and how to get teaching work with their teaching English online partner Tutlo. This was mentioned in their training video, but never again. No programmes co-ordinator mentioned Tutlo and on the Tutlo website I never saw any place to apply to teach English through them.
When it comes to the programmes themselves, I would like participants and volunteers to each fill out questionnaires so we know more about each other and that can aid in pairing people with similar interests for presentations and so the conversations can be more interesting than asking the same tired questions over and over again.
We do surveys at the end of each programme about the venue and about Angloville and I would like to see more transparency and follow up with what changes and improvements Angloville are making. Like when changes are made, share how many people made these suggestions and what has been done to make it better.
The biggest change I would like to see made, and I think this is the most important one, is more feedback for the volunteers. In the programme, we fill out evaluation forms for the participants and the staff and the participants fill out forms about us.
The participants get our feedback forms about them, but we donβt get to know what they said about us and Angloville make it hard to find out how we did and what we can improve on. Like you have to contact their corporate office. I also found that most of the co-ordinators (except for the one on the London programme) did not give us feedback and I rarely saw them walking around and observing and giving any tips. At any work experience or internship, you should be getting feedback and not getting feedback for most of the programme made me feel like the work experience was less valuable.
When filling out surveys about the staff or programmes, the staff shouldnβt be in the room in order to not bias the results, just like in a university course evaluation. More space for comments should be included in the forms.
Would I do it again?
Edit (2/2020): Thinking about it over the past six months, I have changed my opinion. I would personally not do it again. It really wasn’t worth the time or effort. It’s a lot of work for no pay or reward. The lack of feedback was very unhelpful. My basic needs as a vegan were not met. As someone with Aspergers, it was quite taxing to socialise all day with not enough breaks. I need time for myself. That’s just how I am.
Edit (4/2020):Β Out of curiosity I checked Angloville’s website and social media to see what they’re doing in response to COVID-19. Their response to the pandemic is not a good or responsible one. They are saying that they’ll stay open like normal and not cancel summer camps. Throughout March, they were advertising their trips as the pandemic spread all over Europe and countries started shutting down. This does not surprise me at all given how I was treated when I fell ill. This shows they care more about money than the people who make the summer camps possible.
Given all of this, they are not taking this pandemic seriously and they are not looking after their workers, campers, and volunteers properly. An international summer camp is a breeding ground for sickness: people travelling from all over the world and no social distancing. This doesn’t only put the people at the camp at risk, but also the families of workers, volunteers, and campers are also at risk.
Competing English immersion summer camps like Diverbo and Vaughan Town in Spain have cancelled their programmes for the summer of 2020. Summer camps generally across the world have cancelled for the year.
Given all of this I would never do Angloville again. Not even if they paid me. I don’t want anything to do with a company who doesn’t care about their workers and customers.
Edit (8/2020): It appears that I was wrong about Diverbo cancelling programmes. They might have done so temporarily, but they are running in person programmes again. Vaughan appear to have cancelled their in person programmes for the year.
Do I recommend it?
Edit (4/2020):Β Given the information above that I’ve learnt since originally writing this review in the summer of 2019, I no longer feel right recommending Angloville at all. No ifs, no buts. Not worth it. I wouldn’t even recommend sending your children there as campers.
Shout out to my good friend and Topaz level Patron, Patrick and my friend Matt.
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[…] you’ve read about my Angloville experience. Luckily, I took some time to sightsee around the departure cities. I talked to some […]
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Hello.
It was really nice to read about your experiences as a volunteer at Angloville. I took part in the Modrzewiowe WzgΓ³rze camp as a participant (I was the one who gave you an upvote on reddit). I can relate to some of the things you wrote, though I think that the field trip to Rock Town (SkamieniaΕe Miasto) was OK. Hope you’ll visit Poland again in the future.
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Thanks Bartosz! I definitely want to visit Poland again. It was an interesting experience volunteering at Angloville and it was great to meet you. Good luck at school!
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[…] before I did Angloville, I spent a day in London and a day in Brighton for shopping and museums. In this post I’ll be […]
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[…] Worst: Angloville Rural […]
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[…] Read: Honest Review: Teaching English at Angloville […]
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Thank you so much for your honest review. I was just about to sign up but staying in “sheds” and eating pig food is not how it looks in the glossy brochure and does not seem like a fair exchange for my precious time and energy. Ada.
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Thank you! Glad to hear my review was helpful.
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Sounds like you are not open minded enough to travel… trying local food is one of the top reasons people travel and to experience the culture. If you have such strict dietary restrictions you should just stay home or bring your own food!
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I love all kinds of cuisine. Asian cuisines (Middle Eastern, Indian, SE Asian, Chinese, Japanese) just tend to be my favourites. Vegans and vegetarians aren’t that hard to cater to. Most foods out there aren’t made from animals or animal by-products. I was mislead by Angloville that I would be looked after in regards to my diet. I have been a vegetarian for a long time and am vegan because I cannot eat dairy products. I was not given an opportunity to purchase my own food since the hotels were in the middle of nowhere, so I was at the hotel’s mercy.
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I have completed almost 20 AV programs. much of what you say is true, however, I never will understand the “militant” veggie and vegan folk, do you not understand that in Central and Eastern Europe you are considered “abominations” there are so many cultures in the world that DO NOT cater to you, perhaps you should consider this! and not automatically ex[ect to be accommodated, or sign up for other programs. Veggie and Vegan are CHOICES!
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I wish I had brought a bottle of sriracha with me, but hindsight is 20/20. But youβre wrong about vegetarians. People are vegetarians for many reasons: religion, health, ethics, environment, etc. I am a longtime vegetarian who went vegan 3 years ago because I canβt eat dairy products anymore. Veganism is growing every year and I think making as many options vegan as possible is good for accommodating the diverse programme goers and is good for the planet too.
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Exactly, and I always take Tabasco with me myself. I get it in small single-serve packets π This is a great and accurate review you did. Kudos.
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Thank you!
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Completely irrelevant. I have done 42 of these programs in various places around Europe, including when they originally started in Spain in 2002. EVERY one of them caters to vegetarians AND with the exception of Angloville, which is just plain awful and full of lying incompetent staff, they PRODUCE what they offer. Her review is exactly accurate in every respect. I dumped Angloville years ago after they repeatedly lied to me and dumped two programs they didn’t have enough participants for. This has happened at other programs I have done and they don’t dump you sticking you with expenses, they have you come and every volunteer has more free time as a result. Not this crap outfit. They dump you and stick you with your expenses after accepting you. It is a complete piece of greedy crap no one in their right mind should do. PERIOD!!
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Sad to hear that.
Been looking to get into one of the programs.
Please let me know of other volunteer places that you recommend.
Thank you for the honesty.
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Its an interesting look into Angloville. They are pressuring me into signing with them despite me posting about availability 7 months ago. Only now are they after me and my situation has changed but they don’t like taking no for an answer in the time of corona. I’m CELTA qualified and not being paid while the students are paying is a big no no in my book.
I feel the post went way overboard on the vegan train. Vegans in Vietnam last a week and next thing you know they are eating snake and crocodile burgers until they find the buddha restaurants. Other countries won’t cater to your needs, especially outside western cultured nations, so be careful where you choose in future.
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Yeah, that’s definitely bad business practices and very unethical. Not surprised that they treated you like that. As for the vegan bit, well I’ve been a vegetarian since I was 15 and vegan since I was 22, so that’s over a decade not eating meat. That’s why I’m so passionate about the issue. I can fall seriously ill if I accidentally eat animal products. I was misled by Angloville saying that my dietary needs would be catered to. They shouldn’t be doing that.
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Thank you for this – I had a spidey inkling not to accept their offer of placement and now I see why. The more these bad practices are highlighted the better we can turn this industry around from being a TEFL McDonalds
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