Have fun!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by the amount of supervision other posters have in mind. I would exchange cell numbers, plant myself in a couple places and let them know where I am at the time, meet up for lunch, and turn them loose. A place like Hershey is family friendly and all the rides should be enough to keep them from
doing something really silly.
This right here is why I will not allow my kids to go on trips unless I know what kind of parent the chaperone is.
Not the PP but that's why my kids go on events like this, I make sure they don't invite the kids who have helicopter parents.
Did you have a parent planted on your ass when you were 12yrs old is the world just "so dangerous" these days?
The OP said it was 5th graders. My daughter in 5th grade is 10, not 12 and would want the supervision level being discussed. And, I'm by no means a helicopter parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by the amount of supervision other posters have in mind. I would exchange cell numbers, plant myself in a couple places and let them know where I am at the time, meet up for lunch, and turn them loose. A place like Hershey is family friendly and all the rides should be enough to keep them from
doing something really silly.
This right here is why I will not allow my kids to go on trips unless I know what kind of parent the chaperone is.
Not the PP but that's why my kids go on events like this, I make sure they don't invite the kids who have helicopter parents.
Did you have a parent planted on your ass when you were 12yrs old is the world just "so dangerous" these days?
Anonymous wrote:wow, some of you people sure do hover. And NFW am I carrying around a bunch of water bottles and granola bars in my bag for 8-10 boys who don't belong to me "just in case" they happen to get hungry or thirsty because they don't plan for these things. Well, hell, if I knew someone was going to be a walking concession stand whenever I wanted something, I wouldn't bother to think of those things, either.
Anonymous wrote:Have the kids map out the 4-5 rides they want to do and then work from that. If possible, sort the kids into groups based on their interest in various rides (i.e. a kid who doesn't like roller coaster will have a miserable time waiting for the rest of the group to get on roller coasters. That kid should be with the group that likes shows and other rides.) If you can't sort, then make sure everyone gets a couple of events/rides that they like. Stay together. Keep expectations low. They won't be able to do everything. Time goes fast.
Anonymous wrote:There needs to be a second adult. One adult needs to stay in a central meeting place (with a small first aid kit, epi pen, and water) where all the kids know to go to check in. One adult stays with the most wild, or immature, or badly behaved kids who need supervision.
Every kid going must have a working watch/clock (phone). WHen you arrive, everyone "synchronizes watches" (boys will love that phrase). Tell them to meet back at the central meeting spot in three hours. They must stay in groups of three or more. No fewer than three kids in a group. They all need to check in, in person, at the central meeting spot where kids are counted, given a new time to come back, and then set free.
This is how a tween travel camp is run when 70 kids are set loose at Disneyland or somewhere. You stay in groups of three in case one kid gets hurt - one kid stays with the hurt kid, and a third kid goes to the central meeting spot to get help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by the amount of supervision other posters have in mind. I would exchange cell numbers, plant myself in a couple places and let them know where I am at the time, meet up for lunch, and turn them loose. A place like Hershey is family friendly and all the rides should be enough to keep them from
doing something really silly.
This right here is why I will not allow my kids to go on trips unless I know what kind of parent the chaperone is.
Anonymous wrote:I am surprised by the amount of supervision other posters have in mind. I would exchange cell numbers, plant myself in a couple places and let them know where I am at the time, meet up for lunch, and turn them loose. A place like Hershey is family friendly and all the rides should be enough to keep them from
doing something really silly.