A summer program for teens seeking travel, enrichment, and immersion in a fascinating culture. Tour China, from Beijing for all the major sightseeing, to Xi'an for a look at ancient burial practices, to Shanghai for an introduction to colonial China. Then spend a week taking classes on traditional Chinese literature, art, culture, and language in Shanghai. Finish with two days in Hong Kong, an almost surreal mix of Chinese traditionalism and Western capitalism.  
 
Length: 19 days
Fee starting from: $3690
Departing on:
Saturday, June 28, 2008
Overview Detailed Itinerary Destination Information Price Tour / Sign Up

A summer program for teens seeking travel, enrichment, and immersion in a fascinating culture. Tour China, from Beijing for all the major sightseeing, to Xi'an for a look at ancient burial practices, to Shanghai for an introduction to colonial China. Then spend a week taking classes on traditional Chinese literature, art, culture, and language in Shanghai. Finish with two days in Hong Kong, an almost surreal mix of Chinese traditionalism and Western capitalism.

Day 1:
Start Tour
Fly to Los Angeles
Meet Chaperones and Tour Group
Day 2:
Orientation & International Flight
Summer Academy Orientation in Los Angeles
Fly overnight to Beijing
Day 3:
Ni Hao Beijing
Meet your Tour Director and check into hotel
Day 4:
Beijing Landmarks
Beijing guided sightseeing tour
Explore the landmark sights of ancient and modern China with a licensed local guide. Covering the area of 90 football fields, Tiananmen Square can hold over 300,000 people and has always been the site for public proclamations and demonstrations. Mao Tse Tung announced the founding of Communist China here in 1949, and 40 years later student protests against the excesses of that government led to the massacres that unfortunately remain the square's foremost association in the minds of most visitors. The gate at the southern end of the square marks the old city walls, not removed until 1958. See the nerve center of modern China in the adjoining People's Hall, the legislative building, where each of the 32 reception rooms is lavishly decorated in the style of a different province or city. In the main hall, 500 light bulbs illuminate the enormous red star on the ceiling. Move into ancient China in the Forbidden City, the formidable 9,000-room palace complex -- protected by a 170ft.-wide moat -- that housed China's emperors from 1421 until 1923. Think that's grand? The 700 acres of the Summer Palace, a seasonal retreat for the emperors, include a half-mile hallway painted with scenes from China's history, the most beautiful gardens in the country, and a 118ft. carved marble boat decked out with stained-glass windows so that the empress could enjoy her palace lakes in private.
Tiananmen Square
Great Hall of the People
Imperial Palace
Summer Palace
Day 5:
Great Wall
Travel to Great Wall of China
Stretching from Korea to the Gobi Desert, the Great Wall of China reaches 1,500 miles along old imperial borders. The wall was built mainly by millions of slaves, repairing and lengthening existing defensive walls throughout the centuries (the oldest dating back to the 5th century BC), until the massive structure was complete. Sentries posted at the stone watchtowers along its length could use smoke to signal an imminent attack.
Ming Tombs visit
An emperor with a home as elaborate as the Imperial Palace needs an equally elaborate final resting place, and the Ming Tombs fit the bill quite nicely. Overseen by the same emperor, Yongle, who constructed the Forbidden City, the Ming Tombs are an enormous complex of pavilions, gardens, hallways, and tombs designed to provide everything an emperor, empress, or favored concubine would need in the afterlife. Check out the Avenue of Stone Animals, where a dozen pairs of carved animals, some dating back to the 1400s, and half a dozen pairs of carved officials and soldiers wait to escort their leaders to heaven.
Peking Duck dinner
A favorite dish of the emperors during the Ming Dynasty, Peking duck became available to the masses when a later dynasty collapsed and court chefs took their recipes to the streets. Indulge in spiced, crispy duck carved into strips and eaten on thin pancakes with cucumber, shallot, and plum sauce.
Day 6:
Beijing--Xi'an
Fly to Xi'an
Xi'an city walk
Originally built in 1370 and bricked in 1568, the enormous city walls surrounding Xi'an now serve less as defense against outside attack than as pretty packaging for a peaceful town. Take a look around with your Tour Director, then head to the Greater Wild Goose Pagoda. Rising about 200 feet from the center of a temple, the pagoda has seven stories and elaborate carvings over each doorway. No one's sure why the pagoda is named after a goose, but take a gander at the outstanding views available at each of the windows. Residents often toss a coin or two out of these windows for good luck.
Ancient City Wall
Greater Wild Goose Pagoda visit
Day 7:
Xi'an Landmarks
Xi'an guided sightseeing tour
Digging beneath Xi'an can be a rewarding task. Well-diggers in the 1970s stumbled onto an amazing site -- an underground cavern filled with thousands and thousands of life-size terra cotta soldiers and horses. Each soldier is unique, with facial expressions that may have been modelled after a real imperial soldier, and was designed to guard the tomb of Qin Shi Huang. In 1953 workers digging a factory foundation just outside the city in Banpo found the remains of the most complete Neolithic settlement in the world; the artifacts indicate that the settlement was matriarchal, with women controlling food production and the family lineage. Emperors did their own digging at Huaqing, creating an imperial hot spring resort and palace. Dig into history yourself with a local licensed guide.
Huaqing Palace
Hot Springs
Banpo Village Ruins
Terra Cotta Warriors Museum
Tang Dynasty Singing and Dancing Show
Elaborate costumes, haunting rhythms, spectacular dexterity. The Tang Dynasty had a wide reputation for its dance performances, used by the Emperor Taizong not only for entertainment but also to educate citizens about civic duty and military readiness. At the art form's peak popularity, there were thousands of trained dancers kept in the emperor's court.
Day 8:
Xi'an--Shanghai
Fly to Shanghai
Residential Quarter walk
Step out of the commercial craziness of Shanghai and into its quieter residential areas -- though with over 15 million people living in the city, its residential quarters are not necessarily all that quiet. Get a sense of how the locals live with a visit to a Shanghainese family (if the season permits).
Residential quarters
Local families visit (seasonal)
Day 9:
Shanghai Landmarks
Shanghai guided sightseeing tour
Shanghai combines European elegance with Asian flair, transforming its colonial history with a unique modern outlook. See the highlights with a local licensed guide. Surrounded by a busy bazaar, the Yu Yuan Garden offers an amazingly peaceful escape into a sixteenth-century garden with fountains, bridges, and tile dragons undulating along the walls. More peace reigns at the temple of the Jade Buddha, where two exquisitely carved Buddha statues, each carved from a single piece of jade, keep watch over a community of monks.
Yu Yuan Garden
Jade Buddha Temple visit
Shanghai city walk
Stroll the most impressive street in Shanghai. The Bund, the center of colonial Shanghai, now offers an array of elegant embassies, banks, tea houses, and five-star hotels. Even more impressive is the mansion housing the Children's Palace. Once a private residence, the marbled and chandeliered building now offers after-school education for gifted children. Find your own gifts on Nanjing Road, the city's premiere shopping street.
Bund
Children's Palace
Nanking Road
Acrobatic Show
Forget Cirque de Soleil -- Shanghai's Acrobatic Troupe has been performing for more than 50 years, and their combination of superb acrobatics, juggling, magic, and more has made them the world's best acrobatic ensemble.
Day 10:
Chinese Immersion Program
Cultural and Language lessons in Shanghai
Time for your immersion in Chinese language and culture. You'll take Chinese language classes in the morning then work with local students on cultural projects in the afternoons. Learn Chinese calligraphy and painting to make greeting cards and traditional opera masks, practice folk songs and dances, and play football, tug-of-war, and other games with the Chinese students. Almost all classes and lectures will be conducted in Chinese.
Day 11:
Chinese Immersion Program
Cultural and Language lessons in Shanghai
Day 12:
Chinese Immersion Program
Cultural and Language lessons in Shanghai
Day 13:
Chinese Immersion Program
Cultural and Language lessons in Shanghai
Day 14:
Chinese Immersion Program
Cultural and Language lessons in Shanghai
Day 15:
Chinese Immersion Program
Cultural and Language lessons in Shanghai
Day 16:
Chinese Immersion Program
Cultural and Language lessons in Shanghai
Day 17:
Shanghai--Hong Kong
Fly to Hong Kong
Day 18:
Hong Kong Landmarks
Hong Kong guided sightseeing tour
Shopping, shopping, shopping. Hong Kong's history as Britain's Asian economic center means that the city has always buzzed with sellers and buyers. Get a taste at Stanely Market, where clothing and souvenirs are offered, and Kowloon, a district jam-packed with shops, restaurants, and apartment buildings that offers an amazing view across the harbor to the islands of Hong Kong. Take a spiritual break at the Tai Po Man Mo Temple. Named after the Taoist gods of literature ("Man") and martial arts ("Mo"), the small 150-year-old temple is noted for the coils of incense that hang from the ceiling, perfuming the entire building. Find even more sanctuary, and a better view, on Victoria Peak, once the enclave of wealthy Westerners and now a refreshing break from the energetic pace of the city below.
Kowloon
Victoria Peak
Tai Po Man Mo Temple visit
Repulse Bay
Stanley Market
Day 19:
End Tour
Fly from Hong Kong, China
Tour Fee Includes
  • Round-trip airfare
  • Overnight stays in hotels or student residences
  • Breakfast, lunch and dinner daily
  • Full-time services of a professional Tour Director during travel days
  • Full-time services of an experienced chaperone
  • Guided sightseeing tours and city walks as per itinerary
  • Tips to Tour Director, bus drivers, and cruise staff
  • Peking Duck Dinner
  • Tang Dynasty Singing & Dancing Show
  • Shanghai Acrobatic Show
  • Chinese language and culture courses in Shanghai
  • Tour Diary™

Please refer to the Terms and Conditions for additional information about other optional fees