Posts Tagged ‘Aloha Camps’

Are your children in a “Race To Nowhere” at their school?

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Monday, April 4th, 2011
Girls play at Vermont's Horizons Day Camp

Summer allows plenty of unstructured playtime for children.

In 2009, Vicky Abeles’ 13-year-old middle school daughter, Jamey, began to complain of stomach aches after school. A Bay-area lawyer and mother with three children, Abeles began to question whether the pace set by her children’s school schedules, homework, sports and extracurricular activities was a negative factor in Jamey’s health.  Although not a filmmaker, Abeles ambitiously set off with a camera to explore the correlation between the health and happiness of today’s middle and high school students, and the competitive, success-driven curricula of America’s public schools. The result, Race to Nowhere, is a striking examination of America’s current public schools model, a standards-based curriculum promoting future successful members of the American workforce. Specifically, the film critiques the effect on teaching of the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, which mandates levels of achievement in order for states to be eligible for federal funding. In other words, there is a world of exciting knowledge out there, but teachers are expected to “teach to the test.” (more…)

Facebook Ruined Our Trip!

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Thursday, March 10th, 2011
Girls' Expedition Travel Vermont Hulbert

Although it is possible to connect virtually, close, authentic relationships evolve slowly, and in person.

Facebook ruined our trip!” It was Day 18 of a 45-day wilderness journey through Alaska’s Brooks Range, and it had been raining steadily for days. The group of young women, irritable, soaked to the skin, and their two instructors had stopped for one of the myriad decisions on such a trip — what route to follow, when to stop, where to set up camp, what to cook, who leads, who follows — when 17-year-old Mallory Brooks burst out with her cry of complaint.

Like the other girls standing in the rain, Mallory considered the trip a rite of passage, the culmination of many years of preparation. That preparation had begun at the camp they’d all attended in Wisconsin, where Mallory had spent seven summers. Many campers chose to go on expedition trips before they returned to the camp on staff. Mallory had been looking forward to the Alaska trip ever since she’d returned from a 28-day backpacking trip through the Wind Rivers the year before. (more…)

Battle Cry of the Tiger Mothers

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Saturday, February 5th, 2011

Lanakila campers are never far from gentle guidance, but are encouraged to look within for solutions.

In the last few weeks, much of the blogosphere was reacting, possibly over-reacting to the debut of Amy Chua’s book, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, featured in an article in the Wall Street Journal. If you somehow managed to miss the uproar, Chua’s book is subtitled, “This is a story about a mother, two daughters, and two dogs. This was supposed to be a story of how Chinese parents are better at raising kids than Western ones. But instead, it’s about a bitter clash of cultures, a fleeting taste of glory, and how I was humbled by a thirteen-year-old.”  More than a parenting manual, Battle Hymn is a memoir of Chua’s life as a Chinese-American mother, married to a non-Chinese husband, managing their family’s child rearing according to traditional, and strict, Chinese methods. Among the rules imposed upon Chua’s daughters were the following no-no’s:

  • attend a sleepover
  • have a playdate
  • be in a school play
  • complain about not being in a school play
  • watch TV or play computer games
  • choose their own extracurricular activities
  • get any grade less than an A
  • not be the No. 1 student in every subject except gym and drama
  • play any instrument other than the piano or violin
  • not play the piano or violin. (more…)

Four Generations

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Thursday, January 13th, 2011
Cathy McGrath with her daughters Eliza and Caroline Kissick.

Cathy McGrath with her daughters Eliza and Carrie Kissick.

When Cathy McGrath was a young girl, her extended family gathered at the end of every summer at her grandparents’ home in Danville, Indiana. Two of the older cousins, Betsey and Kevin Geraghty, came straight from Lake Morey, where they’d spend the entire summer at the Aloha Camps. Cathy noticed their simple uniforms, green shorts for Betsey, gray for Kevin, and how their duffel bags smelled somehow of piney woods and water. They seemed to have a song — and a prank — for every occasion. To the young girl, these cousins were “so cool” — perhaps especially because when she looked at them, Cathy could imagine herself in a few years wearing the same green shorts as cousin Betsey, singing the same songs, and joining in the family tradition. (more…)

After the Fire

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Tuesday, December 7th, 2010
Aloha's tradition of campcraft was already strong in 1921.

Aloha's tradition of campcraft was already strong in 1921.

Any parent of a teenage daughter knows how rare it is to glimpse “behind the scenes” in an adolescent’s life. Teens often find it hard to articulate their emotions, especially when they’re stretching their sense of what is possible, or who they are. That’s why we’re grateful to share an extraordinary letter from fourth-year Aloha camper Sarah McGrath.

We wrote here earlier this year about Sarah’s attempt to build a one-log fire, one of the requirements for a Vagabond rank in campcraft. At the end of the summer, she left a note for campcraft head Sarah Sincerbeaux (“Sisterbear”). The counselor had asked the teenager to describe her reasons for attempting the Vagabond rank, the third highest of four campcraft ranks, and what she learned from the experience.

Sincerbeaux shared the note with us at The Aloha Foundation. With Sarah McGrath’s permission, we now share it with you.
(more…)

Growing Up Digital, But Taking Summers Off.

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Monday, November 22nd, 2010
Children at Vermont's Aloha Camps thrive on summer days unplugged from cell phones, ipods and computers.

Children at Vermont's Aloha Camps thrive on summer days unplugged from cell phones, iPods and computers.

Parents of today’s ‘tweens and teens consistently wrestle with the omnipresence of technology in their child’s life. As a force for both productivity and time-wasting, parents too struggle with increased dependence on smart phones, laptops, and MP3 players, simul-taneously attempting to set reasonable limits for their children. High school students, who log on to access homework and study guides posted by teachers on class websites, are quickly tempted to move on to Facebook, YouTube or other popular online sites instead of delving into classwork.  Even adults, raised without electronic distractions,  find them- selves struggling to set limits on their own web browsing at work when they find it competing with professional obligations.

In Sunday’s New York Times, Matt Richtel, Pulitzer Prize-winning author and an expert on the effects of today’s technology on developing brains, reports on teens’ increasing inability to remain focused on a task in the face of persistent digital interruptions.  As one of the high school students acknowledges, “’I know I can read a book, but then I’m up and checking Facebook,’ he says, adding: ‘Facebook is amazing because it feels like you’re doing something and you’re not doing anything. It’s the absence of doing something, but you feel gratified anyway.’

He concludes: ‘My attention span is getting worse.’” (more…)

How Does My Child Benefit from Counselor Success Counseling at The Aloha Camps?

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Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

By Barnes Boffey, Lanakila Director

Success Counseling is a philosophy, a theory of behavior, and a set of skills for helping ourselves and other people grow and make effective choices. This short passage from an article written a few years ago explains a few basics which we can use to begin a longer discussion of success counseling and how it works. I would be happy to answer any questions about success counseling or its implementation in future blog entries. We will also be sharing more theory in the months ahead.

Vermont's Camp Lanakila For Boys Woodworking Instruction

Success Counseling means that counselors are prepared to help campers in many ways, every day.

Working as a camp counselor can be exciting, rewarding and enriching. But it’s hard work. Perhaps the most difficult task is dealing with a wide range of human behaviors. In most cases, counselors come to camp with some good natural instincts about working with children. But just as natural athletes need coaching and training to become consistent and disciplined, quality counseling must be developed through training and practice.

Quality camp counseling demands that counselors understand how the counseling process works as well as how its procedures fit into camp’s overall beliefs about the nature of human behavior and personal growth. Over the last 15 years at Lanakila and our two sister camps, Aloha and Aloha Hive, we have developed and refined a counseling model based on a comprehensive method of understanding human behavior. (more…)

Vermont Summer Camp Magic – What Makes The Aloha Camps So Special?

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Friday, October 8th, 2010

Aloha Hive campers in a magical treehouse.

A tree house is the location for magical overnights for girls at Hive.

Autumn in Fairlee, Vermont brings a different mood to the summer camp properties of Aloha, Hive and Lanakila. The long, hot days of July and August have become cool and bright, with frosty mornings and vividly-colored leaves.  The hillsides and waterfronts are mostly quiet. The summer of 2010 is now a memory for hundreds of campers, but the summer of 2011 is already a gleam in all of our collective eyes.  Although the canvas tents have been carefully folded and stored, the canoes, sailboats and kayaks moved indoors and special summer buildings buttoned up against the forthcoming winter, the magic of a summer at The Aloha Camps is still in the air. More significantly, the magic of summer camp for girls and boys continues in their imaginations as they settle into the rhythm of the school year, with its busy days of classes, athletic practices, music lessons and weekend extracurricular obligations.  (more…)

The Right Time

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Wednesday, September 22nd, 2010
Olivia at Vermont's Aloha Camp for Girls.

Olivia during Show Weekend at the end of Session I.

In the summer of 2009, Mary Anne Vaughn was trying to decide whether to send her oldest daughter, Olivia, to camp the following year. It wasn’t the first time she and husband Peter had wondered whether sleep-away camp would be a good experience for their oldest daughter. The year before, when Olivia was 10 years old, the family had visited a sleep-away camp in Maine, but they’d decided that it wasn’t the right time.

The Vaughns were facing a question familiar to thousands of parents: Should my child go to camp? Answering that single question means answering other, interlocking questions about the child, the family, and the camp. Both the questions and the answers vary for individual children and families.

Mary Anne and Peter Vaughn wanted a good fit between their daughter and a camp, but also between a camp and their family values. Peter had gone away to summer camp as a child; Mary Anne had not. They had already built strong family traditions that included spending two weeks together at a rustic cabin on an island in Maine. Mary Anne needed to be sure that if Olivia went away to camp, she’d get something beyond what their family was already providing. (more…)

Housekeeping! Sharing Some 2010 Summer News That Got Away!

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Sunday, September 19th, 2010

The months of June, July and August passed in a warm, sunny blur this year.  Hot, summer days in Fairlee were filled with activity seven days a week, on all five Aloha Foundation campuses. Hundreds of staff and campers swelled Fairlee’s summer population and in the office, we  enjoyed the excitement that the camp season brought.  It is hard, however, to keep up with all the fun that goes on, and even more difficult at times to share the news with our fans.  Now that the tents are put away, the docks pulled and campers, counselors and staff alike back in school, the full time employees in Fairlee are able to catch their collective breath a little, before we begin the preparation for summer 2011 (yes, we are already thinking ahead!).

Before we leave the summer of 2010 behind, here are a few stories you might have missed.

Vermont National Guard families enjoy respite, recreation and relaxation at Ohana – and Ohana enjoys their company.

Vermont National Guard member enjoys time with daughter at Ohana Family Camp.

Vermont National Guard member cuddles his daughter at Ohana Family Camp.

Fifteen families of Vermont National Guard members currently deployed in Afghanistan – about 55 parents and children in all – took up residence at Ohana Family Camp from June 27th through July 2nd. They came from all over the state — Georgia, VT, way up in the NW corner to Bennington at the southern tip. Written words can’t portray the experience better than does this short video report that appeared in a television news broadcast on the CBS affiliate in Burlington, VT. Many donors contributed toward the $20,000 cost of this tuition-free week at Ohana for Guard member families, including $5,000 from Vermont National Guard Charitable Foundation.

Ohana Camp Vermont National Guard Letter from Bernie Sanders

Senator Sanders letter to The Aloha Foundation.

Vermont’s United States Senator Bernie Sanders wrote this to us, in part: Allow me, on behalf of a of not only Vermont but a grateful nation to thank [you] for providing a week of joy, fun and relaxation at Ohana Camp for Vermont National Guard family members, while their loved ones are serving overseas…I applaud the vision, commitment and compassion demonstrated by the Aloha Foundation…to reach out to these family members faced with lengthy separation…[and] feel certain that the memories of the week spent at Ohana Camp will help assure the families that there are many of us who care about them…and want to offer support and gratitude…Aloha! Congratulations on a job well done.

After the VNG week was over, an article in our local Valley News about the Ohana family camp week caught the eye of a Lyme, NH, philanthropist. The anonymous donor — not previously a contributor to the Foundation — has pledged $25,000 to support the entire cost of next year’s edition of the Guard program. In addition, the donor has offered to pay the way for any families left on the waiting list for this summer’s Guard Week who wish to participate in New Year’s Family Camp at Hulbert in December. (more…)