News From the Camp Office
Written by Jason Sebell   
Tuesday, 31 January 2012 00:00

We are really excited to see so many of our Camp friends this Saturday at our NY, NJ, CT and PA Area Camp Reunion!  The event will be from 7 - 9pm at the NY Sports Club in Ramsey, NJ.  We'll be showing the Summer 2011 Video Yearbook, playing basketball, indoor soccer, swimming, and hanging out with our friends.  Parents are invited to stay for the entire event, and we will be serving pizza and refreshments to all (including gluten free for those in the community who eat GF).  If you plan on swimming please remember to bring a bathing suit and towel.  If you have any questions please contact Jason in the Camp Office.

 
News From the Camp Office
Written by Jason Sebell   
Monday, 19 December 2011 00:00

We wanted to let all campers know that this afternoon we are placing our 2012 Camps Kenwood & Evergreen calendar AND the music from Hollowpallooza 2011 in the mail to you!   These are our holiday gifts to you!  The calendar is our way to remind you every day of this coming year of the friendships you made this summer as a camper at Kenwood & Evergreen.

The Hollowpallooza disc is a music DVD filled with over 40 fantastic tunes performed by campers and staff this summer.  So that we could put all of the music on one disc it is a DVD and not a CD, so it will only work in a computer!  Once you place it in your computer you will be able to import the songs into your itunes account, and then transfer it into whatever media player you would like.  We hope that you enjoy it!

 
News From the Camp Office
Written by Jason Sebell   
Tuesday, 13 December 2011 00:00

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We had a blast this weekend at the annual New England Area Camp Reunion in Natick, MA.  More than 80 campers and staff got together for an evening of Swimming, Indoor Soccer, Gaga, Basketball, and hanging out with camp friends.  We also watched a preview of the summer 2011 video yearbook, which will be mailed to all campers in the coming days.  It was wonderful to see so many friends and have a few hours to hang out together.  We can't wait to see even more people at the Tri-State Area Reunion in February!

 
News From the Camp Office
Written by Jason Sebell   
Wednesday, 23 November 2011 00:00

We want to wish all of our friends and family celebrating tomorrow a happy and healthy Thanksgiving. We are very thankful to be a part of such a loving and caring community!

If over the break you are fortunate enough to spend time with your camp friends please take a picture and This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . We'd love to post it on the Camp Facebook wall.

 
Thoughts about Sexual Harassment and Bullying...
Written by Scott Brody   
Tuesday, 08 November 2011 00:00

As you may have already heard, The American Association of University Women surveyed 1,965 students and found that nearly half of both boys and girls in grades 7 through 12 reported experiencing sexual harassment at school, defined by the researchers as “unwelcome sexual behavior” and including everything from sexual comments to being physically intimidated in a sexual way. (See the "Motherlode" blog in the NYTimes for a good summary). Boys were most troubled by the same kind of harassment found in any survey about bullying: taunts about being gay. For young women, though, what bothered them most was something different, and far less likely to be covered under the common rubric of the bullying prevention program: unwelcome sexual comments, jokes or gestures.

I believe that both sexual harassment and bullying are really part of a larger issue for our children: the climate in our schools and the culture in which our children are learning and growing.  While social cruelty in any form must be addressed head on, most bullying and sexual harassment by students begins in smaller forms, as our children try to figure out who they are as individuals and social beings.

Social cruelty in any form will thrive at school unless we can create a culture which develops empathy in our children and builds social capital for kids who choose to be a good friend and a positive member of the school community. Building a positive culture at school involves creating strong partnerships with parents. It requires parents to support teachers and other educators in the work of helping to develop the social and emotional intelligence of their children, and not to respond with a "not my child" reaction when teachers are trying to do this work.

It also requires teachers to be trained to do this work, and to be supported by parents and administrators. It requires teachers, administrators and parents to model positive behavior, and nurture empathy. It also requires each of us to call our children on the "little things"...those little acts of exclusion or meanness that might seem inconsequential but can lead to bullying or harassment in the future if left without response and consequence in the present. In many ways, these behaviors are developmentally appropriate, but that doesn't mean we can or should ignore them.

School climate is a big issue and requires big solutions. Anti-Bullying or Anti-Harassment curricula can only go so far. Unless a child receives little or no social benefit from this negative behavior, it will continue. To build a culture in school and at home where social cruelty, exclusion, and meanness have no place and provide little or no payoff to kids is an onerous goal, but I believe such a systemic approach to addressing this negative behavior it is the only solution to these vexing problems. Our current focus on the reporting of bullying when it occurs and the management of such incidents is important, but it does not begin to address the underlying issues. It is like approaching health and wellness by crafting better emergency room procedures. We need to get at the root of the problem, and the root of this problem is climate and culture. Imagine how much more learning could take place at schools in which children truly feel emotionally and physically safe?

I'm curious to know your thoughts on this topic.  Please join the ongoing discussion we are having about this and other important child develpment issues on the Camps Kenwood & Evergreen facebook page or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 
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