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  • Guitar Hero Camp

    Guitar Hero 3 - now in Summer Camp!Ah, summer camp. Log cabins. Bug juice. Video games.

    Exsqueeze me?

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  • New Brit Reality Series is Home Alone With Real Kids

    A British TV show has taken the early nineties hit that made Macauley Culkin (remember him) a star for ten minutes and made a reality version. 

    Boys and Girls Alone puts ten girls and ten boys alone in a house - or at the very least, as alone as you can be in a house crawling with cameramen and sound guys - for two weeks to see how kids would really cope without their parents.

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  • Jobs you don't want – Camp Parent Liaison

     Parent Liaison, can I help you?

    The Times article about parental over-involvement at summer camp mentioned a job that was new to me.

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  • How to be an annoying camp parent

    Camp Parents

    Inspired by a recent New York Times piece about parents of children who go to sleep-away camp, here are a few tips for those who want to emulate their behavior.

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  • Cribsheet: Summer Camp

    Length of the average summer vacation in U.S. schools: 9-11 weeks
    Length of the average American vacation for working adults (in 1999): 3.8 days

    Percentage of six-to-twelve-year-old children who regularly spend time in summer programs: 24%
    Percentage of children who are in summer school: 6%
    Proportion of children who are regularly in the care of relatives during the summer: 1/3
    Percentage of children who are regularly in family childcare during the summer: 6%
    Percentage of children who are regularly in the care of a nanny or baby-sitter during the summer: 8%
    Percentage of children under 13 who are regularly without adult supervision during the summer: 11%
    Percentage of higher-income children who are regularly without adult supervision during the summer: 15%

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    Posted Jan 16 2008, 02:00 PM by editors with | with no comments
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  • Creepshow Camp: Now They Have Camps for Everything

    Creepshow CampPerhaps your kid isn't into scouting. Maybe he or she doesn't play an instrument, so band camp is out of the question. Not an athlete? No basketball camp for that one. Maybe you should consider Creepshow Camp. That's right. You heard me. I said Creepshow Camp.

    Now, it helps if you live in Northern California, because the camp is only at The Hypnodrome in San Francisco, but it sounds like a really cool camp for a kid that really likes the horror genre. Creepshow Camp is considered a performing arts camp, so have your kid ready to go on the stage for the camp finale.

    And presumably scare the hell out of you.

    The whole thing sounds pretty cool. The website doesn't offer very much information, but it does have an email address where you can get more details if you are interested.


  • Geeky Kids Get Good Camp

    geek campTech camps are on the rise, with 16 percent more computer camps now than in 2000. Many summer camps are offering science, robotics, game programming, and whole bunch of other subjects to appeal to the tape-on-the-glasses set. A number of people are concerned that with childhood obesity rates rising, too much summer time in front of a monitor might only exacerbate the inactivity problem, and recommend throwing a couple of weeks of general interest camp into the mix. There's also the concern that we as a society spend too much time plugged into various devices, and not enough time having real live human interactions.

    Some camps address these issues by offering field trips to places like NASA and behind the scenes at Disneyworld. And the director of marketing for one camp, Cybercamps, says, "'It's not just everyone sitting in front of the computer until the wee hours of the morning by themselves... We are getting them out of their bedrooms and basement and getting them to play in a social environment, which is a huge plus.'" I think that helping geeked-out kids interact with each other and introducing them to other kids with similar interests sounds like a great thing. If I remember correctly, summer camp often had a Lord of the Flies element to it that relegated the nerdy, unathletic children (like me) to ostracism and bunk sabotage. The only real danger I see here is that if you get that many geeky kids in one room with a bunch of state-of-the-art computer stuff, you could end up with the World Bank being hacked or something. But shoot, sign me up now for the sleepaway program, cuz I wanna learn 3-D modeling.


  • Family Camp. Missing the Point?

    I went to summer camp for ten years growing up, and when I was too old to be a camper, I became a counselor. Instead of making God's eyes out of yarn and twig for every member of my family, I taught other young souls how to give their hearts and crafts to Jesus. Instead of just following orders to jump off the tower and whizz down the zip line, I did the commanding. And instead of wigging out to camp songs made up of a serious of indistinguishable funny sounding, rhyming words, I stood in the middle of a circle of wigged out kids and led them all in one more chorus. It was heaven.

    And part of the reason it was heaven was that I was in my element there. I was braver, funnier, more up on pseudo-Native American rituals at campfires than I was as a city kid on my block in Chicago, at home with my parents. My mom always said I came home from my weeks at camp a better version for me. I'm not saying that being parent-free was the sole reason for that transformation (surely the decreased fuel emissions and new friends and enthusiastic cheers about God and censored rock 'n roll had something to do with it), but being out of my element was rejuvenating, a fresh start for a kid bogged down by social studies and PE dodgeball and lunchroom cliques.

    Now that I'm a parent, I wish for the all-out experience of camp, where anyone can self-dorkify to the tune of Boom! Boom! Ain't It Great to Be Crazy?. I would love a week to kayak and play tether ball and celebrate Christmas in July with a tube steak buffet. But am I nostalgic enough for all of that to consider hauling the whole clan to family camp? As great as I think the postcard for family camp sounds -- with single-family cabins and archery and adult activities, like stretching and yoga classes -- does it defeat the purpose? Is this an awesome opportunity for a back-to-basics family vacay or does it strip kids of the chance to find out who they are in nature, without  iPods and X-Boxes and mostly, mom and dad? 

    And speaking of mom and dad, didn't the advent of summer camp arrive out of some parents need for kid-free week to work, play or just sit in the silence during the summer? While I am committed to find the right camp for my boy when he is a bit older, I don't think that will be a place his pops and I pack up to go along to as well. In the meantime, I will just help him practice up on the words to Your Mama Don't Wear No Socks! and start a mental to-do list for that glorious week, years away, when the kid's away and my husband and I are enjoying Parent Camp. At home. Alone.


  • "American Idol" Summer Camp For Kids! Yesss!

    American IdolI will admit, I do not watch "American Idol".  But I have watched it, obsessively even, and knowing how easy it is to get sucked into the addictiveness of a show like that, and knowing too how many hours there are in my week, there are some things I just have to stay away from.  But!  I can live vicariously through my kids, right?  So beginning this summer, there's going to be a series of "American Idol" summer camp sessions for kids ages 12-15 with surprise guest celebrity appearances, all for the (cough) paltry sum of $2900!  But hey, your kid is worth it, right?

    Auditions won't be required, and Simon, Paula, and Randy won't be judging the kids.  I know.  I'm disappointed too. 



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