Summer Camps Make
Kids Resilient
I recently spoke to
300 camp directors about how to make children more resilient
to life stress. Summer camps, we discovered, are perfect
places to help children optimize their psychosocial
development.
After all, summer
camps are places where children get the experiences they
need to bolster their range of coping strategies. There are
the simple challenges of learning how to build a fire, going
on a hike, or conquering a high ropes course. There are the
much more complex challenges of getting along with a new
group of peers, learning how to ask for help from others, or
taking manageable amount of risks without a parent following
after you.
The best camping
experiences offer these opportunities for manageable amounts
of risk and responsibility, what I term "the risk takers
advantage" (see my book Too Safe for Their Own Good for more
examples). The worst camps pander to children as if they are
entitled little creatures whose parents are paying big sums
of money. Children at camp can't be treated like customers
if they are going to get anything out of the experience.
They need to be treated like students whose caregivers, the
counselors, know what the kids need to grow.
Camps that pull this
off and make kids, especially teens, put away the makeup,
stash the iPods, get a little dirty and even a little
frustrated while having fun and making new friends, are the
kinds of camps that offer children the best of what they
need. Looking at those experiences from the vantage point of
my research on resilience, I know that camps help our
children develop great coping strategies when they provide
seven things all children need:
1)
New relationships, not just with peers, but with trusted
adults other than their parents. Just think about how useful
a skill like that is: being able to negotiate on your own
with an adult for what you need.
2) A
powerful identity that makes the child feel confident in
front of others. Your child may not be the best on the ropes
course, the fastest swimmer, or the next teen idol when he
sings, but chances are that a good camp counselor is going
to help your child find something to be proud of that he can
do well.
3)
Camps help children feel in control of their lives, and
those experiences of self-efficacy can travel home as easily
as a special art project or the pine cone they carry in
their backpack. Children who experience themselves as
competent will be better problem-solvers in new situations
long after their laundry is cleaned and the smell of the
campfire forgotten.
4)
Camps make sure that all children are treated fairly. The
wonderful thing about camps is that every child starts
without the baggage they carry from school. They may be a
geek or the child with dyslexia. At camp they will both find
opportunities to just be kids who are valued for who they
are. No camps tolerate bullying (and if they do, you should
withdraw your child immediately).
5)
At camp kids get what they need to develop physically.
Ideally, fresh air, exercise, a balance between routine and
unstructured time, and all the good food their bodies need.
Not that smores (marshmallows, chocolate and graham cracker
treats) don't have a place at the campfire, but a good camp
is also about helping children find healthy
lifestyles.
6)
Perhaps best of all, camps offer kids a chance to feel like
they belong. All those goofy chants and team songs, the
sense of common purpose and attachment to the identity that
camps promote go a long way to offering children a sense of
being rooted.
7)
And finally, camps can offer children a better sense of
their culture. It might be skit night, or a special camp
program that reflects the values of the community that
sponsors the camp, or maybe it's just a chance for children
to understand themselves a bit more as they learn about
others. Camps give kids both cultural roots and the chance
to understand others who have cultures very different than
their own.
That's an impressive
list of factors that good camping experiences provide our
children. Whether it is a subsidized day camp in a city or a
luxurious residential facility up in the mountains, camps
can give our kids a spicy combination of experiences that
prepare them well for life. Add to that experience the
chance for a child's parents to reinforce at home what the
child nurtures at camp, and maybe, just maybe, we'll find in
our communities and schools amazing kids who show the
resilience to make good decisions throughout their
lives.
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