
Merrowvista
campers and counselors enjoy the Four Fold Tournament, a 10-day tournament
where teams work together on wacky events like creating chariots of
cardboard. (Rebekah Seaman)
Beyond
Archery And Arts And Crafts: New Research From UNH Finds Summer Camps
Can Foster Social Development In Youth By
Beth Potier, Media Relations
Summer camp can do "s'more" than teach kids to canoe,
hike, and sing fun songs: New research indicates that summer camp
can significantly enhance the social development of youth.
"Camp can make a critical difference in kids' lives,"
says Michael Gass, professor of outdoor education at University
of New Hampshire and lead researcher on the project, conducted in
cooperation with the American Youth Foundation at AYF's Camp Merrowvista
in Tuftonboro, N.H.
Gass and researchers from UNH surveyed youth between the ages of
8 and 13 at the beginning and the end of the summer of 2004, comparing
the inter- and intrapersonal skills of campers at Camp Merrowvista
with youth who were awaiting attendance in a fall program at Merrowvista.
The summer campers showed significantly greater improvement in a
variety of social skills, including time management, initiating
action in new situation, self-confidence, task leadership, and interpersonal
skills.
Gass notes that such social skill development can lead to academic
benefits and can build a resiliency against negative behaviors that
may surface later in kids' lives. The U.S. Department of Education
and other experts agree that middle childhood, the age of the youth
surveyed, is a crucial stage at which children need to develop social
skills of self-regulation, empathy, and caring to prepare for beneficial
peer relationships and friendships.
Gass and the UNH researchers will return to Merrowvista this coming
summer to further probe what about camp seems to provide these social
development benefits, but he suspects that social development is
fostered by intentional programming, which infuses traditional camp
activities with guided discussion and reflection. "You can't
just assume by sending your kid to camp that you're going to get
these benefits," he says. "Kids left on their own don't
just mature into social development. You've got to intentionally
program experiences."
At American Youth Foundation camps, including Camp Merrowvista,
"every time they do something at camp, there's an intentionality
toward helping develop stronger kids, socially and emotionally,"
says Gass. While most camps hum with "lights-out" chatter,
for instance, each Merrowvista camper "village" uses insight
sessions throughout the day led by trained staff. Such sessions
encourage reflection about the day's group dynamics or consensus
building among fellow "villagers."
UNH and AYF will present this research to camping industry peers
at the American Camp Association national conference in February,
and AYF will disseminate its programming philosophy in hopes that
it becomes widely adopted among summer camps. "AYF will be
publishing and trying to influence the field with this research,"
says Gass. In addition to Camp Merrowvista, AYF, based in St. Louis,
operates Camp Miniwanca in Michigan.
Gass, who has worked with AYF for nearly 15 years and is a leading
researcher in adventure programming, offers suggestions to finding
a socially powerful summer camp. Accreditation by the American Camp
Association (approximately 1,000 summer camps are ACA accredited)
or the Association for Experiential Education is a good starting
point, but Gass encourages parents to explore the camp's philosophy.
"Is the purpose of the camp strictly recreational, or is it
focused on youth development?" he says. "Will the camp
teach my kids to fish, or might it also help them develop socially?"
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