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Beyond bug spray
Education summer camps abound
by
Laura Bland
Used
to be, if you were a kid, going to summer camp meant
toasted marshmallows and mosquito bites, musty-smelling
sleeping bags, bug spray and strange sounds in the night.
Nowadays, however, the camp concept has taken on new
meaning as busy and ambitious parents look for opportunities
to keep their childrens' brains working throughout the
summer.
While
educational camps might not rank as high as CD burners
on a kid's list, they've moved out of the woods and
onto family radar screens. "A lot of parents are
looking for ways to expand their children's educational
opportunities throughout the summertime. They don't
want them sitting and watching television or PlayStation
all summer," says Vikki Barth, youth and family
programs coordinator for the Children's Museum of Richmond,
which has a summer calendar full of camps planned for
kids as young as three years old. "They don't realize
they're learning. They just think they're having fun."
Summer might seem far away, but with so many choices
and limited camp space, it pays to start thinking about
camp now. And in Virginia, there's a camp for everybody.
Music. Theater. Sports. Cooking. History. Science. At
the Children's Museum in Richmond, children between
the ages of 7 to 10 can explore everything from the
James River watershed to comedy, the history of money
and sculpture during the museum's City Slickers one-week
camps, which run from June 24 through Aug. 16. The camps
cost $170 for members and $180 for nonmembers, with
prices increasing somewhat for people who register after
April 15. Fourth-graders can learn about the etiquette
practices of their Civil War-era counterparts during
camp at the Virginia Museum of the Confederacy. And
young musicians from age 9 on up to seniors in high
school can play their instruments in a chamber group
during the Richmond Symphony's summer camp in cooperation
with Richmond public schools.
Richmond's
program offers the chance for more than 100 children
from around the area to study and play music under the
tutelage of professional musicians, says Marta Weldon,
education director for the Richmond Symphony, who is
on leave as the symphony's second clarinetist. "From
our point of view, they're getting training with professional
musicians, mentoring from professional musicians and
intensive music study, which they don't normally get.
They'll participate in chamber music groups, which is
something they never have the chance to experience in
school." Typically, students are assigned to a
quartet, where they perform by themselves without the
direction of a conductor. "You can translate all
of those skills into self-esteem, leadership and teamwork,"
says Weldon.
If
the great outdoors is more your child's style, opportunities
abound at week-long field adventure camps sponsored
by the Virginia Living Museum in Newport News. For instance,
middle-school kids can explore marine habitats on North
Carolina's Outer Banks or take surveys of flying squirrels
in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Accommodations include
cabins or tents. The cost of the camp is $495 for nonmembers
and $450 for museum members.
Young
history buffs might enjoy traveling back in time with
the Virginia Museum of the Confederacy's Explorer's
Camp the week of July 22. During the week, rising fifth-
through seventh-graders visit battlefields and historic
sites around Richmond. Before July 1, the cost for members
is $130 and $150 for nonmembers. For fourth- through
sixth-graders, the museum also offers a series of three,
day-long camps in August that explore subjects such
as Civil War naval inventions, what kids were wearing
and doing in the 1860s and technological innovations
during the Industrial Revolution. Each camp costs $25
for members before Aug. 1 and $35 for nonmembers.
Many organizations, such as the YMCA, continue to offer
traditional craft and activity-based day camps or "sleep
away" camps for kids who want that experience.
For those kids who want to go beyond the bug spray,
the opportunities are almost limitless.
Contact
information:
Children's
Museum of Richmond, Vikki Barth, (804) 474-7013,
or e-mail at vbarth@c-mor.org.
Virginia
Museum of the Confederacy, Ida O'Leary,
(804) 644-7150, or ioleary@moc.org.
Virginia
Living Museum, Jim Drummond, (757) 595-1900.
Richmond
Symphony and Richmond Public Schools Summer
Music Camp, Nelson Lawson, instructional specialist,
music education, Richmond Public Schools, 301 N. 9th
St., 12th floor, Richmond, VA 23219. Or e-mail mweldon@richmondsymphony.com
Return to Virginia Business - March 2002
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