Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Gosh, open YMCA all-summer camps are, and have always been, lord of the flies style. These are not places where happy memories are made - at least not for a big minority of kids.
Find camps that are more focused activity based, where you don't need to find a friend club. We tend to switch up camps every week, and have always only don't half day camps (DS wants the afternoons to decompress) - so when he was younger, that meant a babysitter who picked him up and hung out with him in the afternoon, and now that he's older, he just chills by himself.
Camps that have been good for him: Sailing, art (even though he's terrible at art), robotics, lego, STEM-center, chess, rowing, cooking, pottery, bounce house, etc etc. Anything where there's an organized activity, or organized small groups.
Do you have any idea what an a-hat you sound like. Some people need the all-day camp, because they work and can't afford to pay for lots of expensive camps AND a sitter.
Good Lord.
Anonymous wrote:Gosh, open YMCA all-summer camps are, and have always been, lord of the flies style. These are not places where happy memories are made - at least not for a big minority of kids.
Find camps that are more focused activity based, where you don't need to find a friend club. We tend to switch up camps every week, and have always only don't half day camps (DS wants the afternoons to decompress) - so when he was younger, that meant a babysitter who picked him up and hung out with him in the afternoon, and now that he's older, he just chills by himself.
Camps that have been good for him: Sailing, art (even though he's terrible at art), robotics, lego, STEM-center, chess, rowing, cooking, pottery, bounce house, etc etc. Anything where there's an organized activity, or organized small groups.
Anonymous wrote:We had a long chat about how friendships are built often by finding things you have in common. And I told him he could share some of his interests with the other kids and see if there is commonality.