
Jeremy Mendelsohn
Bio
Jeremy Mendelsohn is a travel industry leader, Director of Strategic Accounts at All Roads Travel, and founder of TravelZeeky, with over a decade of expertise in student and group travel. https://www.jeremy-mendelsohn.com/
Stories (4)
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How Remote Workers are Changing Local Economies
I’ll never forget the first morning I spent in a small Portuguese town. I grabbed coffee at a corner café, and the barista asked where I was from. When I said I worked remotely and planned to stay for a few months, her eyes lit up. “We need more people like you,” she said.
By Jeremy Mendelsohnabout a year ago in Wander
How Local Connections Changed My Travel Business
When I started my travel business, it was simple. Get students out of their routines and into new worlds. Show them the sites, the landmarks, the places they’d see in guidebooks. But as time went on, I saw something wasn’t clicking. Travelers were missing something deeper.
By Jeremy Mendelsohnabout a year ago in Journal
Why Travel for Students Shouldn’t Be a Privilege
Growing up, I was lucky enough to travel on a few school trips. Those experiences shaped me in ways I never could have imagined sitting in a classroom. I remember my first trip abroad; it was to a historic city in Europe. For the first time, I felt history come alive. I was no longer just reading about ancient ruins; I was walking through them, touching stone walls that were centuries old. That trip changed how I saw the world and made history more real than any textbook ever could.
By Jeremy Mendelsohnabout a year ago in Journal
Why Travel Shouldn’t Be a Luxury: Making Student Travel Accessible for All
Travel is one of the most valuable experiences students can have. It helps them grow in ways that classrooms alone can’t provide. Studies show that 76% of teachers believe travel has a lasting impact on students’ lives, building their independence, confidence, and a wider view of the world. Through travel, students get to step out of their comfort zones, meet people from different cultures, and see life from new perspectives. But many students miss out on these opportunities because of financial barriers. This raises an important question: how can we make travel accessible for all students?
By Jeremy Mendelsohnabout a year ago in Wander