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A Letter from Peg

by Peg Smith, ACA Executive Director

I just received a call from Dayton’s camp director. As you can imagine, my heart skipped a beat waiting to discover why I was getting a call from the camp director. There was no problem, unlike the calls I have received from school . . . ah, that’s another story. I digress. No, nothing was wrong — rather, and more important, he called to share something with me that was positive and an opportunity. I feel he understands that he and I are partners in Dayton’s development.

It is critical to me, as a parent, that the other adults in the lives of my children recognize our shared importance in the growth and development of Dillon and Dayton and are accessible. Open communication with those other adults is so essential to me. I don’t need to talk to Dayton or invade the camp environment, but to know I have a direct link to the adults who have assumed responsibility for Dayton is terribly important to me.

I also find, as a parent, the camp experience legitimizes the importance and value of positive experiential activities for people — particularly children and youth. Camp professionals allow me to offer these vital developmental opportunities to my child in a world that otherwise seems to want to promote academics and conformance to some standardized norm. As a parent, I question whether this lopsided adult version of childhood will actually result in producing well-rounded, healthy, contributing adults.

Where do children have their mental, personal, emotional, and physical needs nurtured? Where will they learn to get along with others, to take safe risks, to deal with conflict in a constructive way that encourages them to be creative, to explore and discover, to learn by actively doing, to try — to fail and try again? As a parent, I need the support of the camp community to legitimize what I intuitively understand as a parent — to be a positive productive adult one needs the opportunity to truly experience childhood . . . that is how one grows.

I listen to camp owners/directors talk about the plethora of behavior/mood altering prescriptive drugs that children and youth bring to camp and pray children are not being medicated through childhood. I am grateful camp is a place where children and youth can run, jump, swim, climb, sing, laugh, tumble, and romp about. I read the statistic from the National Center for Health that tells us that 15 percent of our children from the ages of six to nineteen are overweight — and rejoice that physical activity, nutrition, and healthy lifestyles are a part of the camp experience. I monitor the summaries of our Hot Line calls and groan at the number of children and youth coming to our camps today who are cutting themselves. At the same time, I hold onto hope that the camp environment will support their emotional needs.

We do need to partner with parents. The children and youth of today need the strength of our committed partnership. Day camps, resident camps, conference centers, of all affiliations, need to reach out and give parents the support they need to justify sending their children to camp. Camp is an important thread in the fabric of child and youth development opportunities. Let’s work with parents to weave a strong future.

Originally published in the 2004 September/October issue of Camping Magazine.

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