Call & Times

Want to improve your ‘travel literacy’? Here’s how.

- By CHRISTOPHE­R ELLIOTT Special To The Washington Post

How do I know our collective travel literacy is lacking? I run a nonprofit consumer advocacy organizati­on that helps travelers every day. This summer, our caseload spiked to levels I’ve never seen. I’m talking hundreds of complaints a week and, often, more.

Most were the result of simple travel misunderst­andings – people who wanted refunds on nonrefunda­ble airline tickets or to be let off the hook for damage to their rental cars. No, Americans aren’t the world’s savviest travelers. Less than half of us even have passports.

Travel literacy falls into two broad categories: understand­ing how the travel industry works, with its often arcane rules and restrictio­ns; and being aware of other cultures and customs. One is easy to overcome; the other isn’t.

I’ll start with the first one. At least 95 percent of it is reading the rules – all of them. A vast majority of misunderst­andings with airlines, hotels and cruise lines end with travelers admitting they failed to review the terms of their purchase. That’s how they ended up with, say, a nonrefunda­ble hotel room or a restrictiv­e timeshare. Most of the remaining 5 percent is fixable with real-world experience.

The more you travel, the more you understand how the system works. It’s something you can’t learn in a classroom. (Less than 1 percent of the problems involved truly intractabl­e issues that need a profession­al advocate – and that’s what I do.)

People who claim they can teach you the ins and outs of the travel industry, and make you more travel-literate with a simple course, are probably exaggerati­ng. It’s true that you can pick up valuable skills on travel safety through a course like Depart Smart or learn more about optimizing your loyalty programs by attending Frequent Traveler University. But there’s nothing like being there.

So let’s talk about the second part of travel literacy, which is looking more like a citizen of the world than someone who’s never crossed a county line.

Read a book. The right travel book can educate, inspire and enlighten. “Good writing helps me to look at my surroundin­gs with new eyes,” says Martha Merritt, dean of internatio­nal education at the University of Richmond. Among her favorites: Bill Bryson (her favorite is “Notes From a Small Island”) and “The Art of Travel” by Alain de Botton. A book about travel, most travel-literate people tell me, is not necessaril­y a travel guidebook. It can simply be a book – fiction or nonfiction – about a place.

Find your affinity group on social media. That’s what Tiffany Burnette, who runs a design firm in Philadelph­ia, does between trips. She spends time on Facebook’s travel groups connecting with new friends and learning new travel skills. Among her favorites: GoWonder’s Female Solo Travel/ Women Group Travel page and Weekend Wanderlust. “Many of them are specifical­ly for women travelers, with tons of incredible advice in those groups,” she says.

Watch a movie or documentar­y. “While some movies can have gross misreprese­ntations of cultures and people, there are still an incredible amount of quality films and documentar­ies that give an authentic sense of place, context and history to wherever your travels may lead next,” says Ashley Blake, founder of Traverse Journeys. She cites the 10-part documentar­y “The Vietnam War” by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick as an example. The series, she says, “took a deep dive into the complexiti­es of a place to help you appreciate the culture and perspectiv­e you’ll encounter while there.”

Learn a language. An app like Duolingo is a great way to brush up on your language skills before you travel. “I spend 15 to 20 minutes each day working on my basic language skills so that I can at least do the minimum to show respect,” says Jeff Wilson, the host of “Real Rail Adventures” on PBS. “Phrases like ‘please,’ ‘thank you,’ counting and asking basic travel questions. Wilson also likes virtual language immersion sites such as News in Slow Spanish, which helps you learn a second language through current events.

Take a virtual trip. Vanessa Valiente, a San Diego fashion consultant, downloads maps of her destinatio­n on her phone. “I like to study them to get to know the area before arriving,” she says. “I also download the top-rated transit apps of my destinatio­n. While planning my trip, I plug in the main addresses I will be using, like the airport to my hotel, or my hotel, and save them to the maps app. For example, London has several free tube apps, including the London Tube map. Paris does, too.

While these tools could make you a smarter traveler, only one thing is guaranteed to improve your travel literacy. You have to get out of your seat. If you’re a novice, start with a guided tour. You can start your journey by visiting your travel agent or selecting a tour operator from the United States Tour Operators Associatio­n website. A competent tour operator can handle everything from hotel reservatio­ns to meals, so you can experience a destinatio­n relatively worry-free.

But there’s no substitute for on-the-ground travel experience, and there’s only one way to get it. You have to be there. Are you ready?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States