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APRIL 23, 2001
E-happy campers
Computers beat canoes
By Dori Jones Yang
Forget canoeing
and campfires. In the 21st century, the cool place for kids to
be during summer is at computer camp. Campers get
to stay in real college dorm rooms (possibly the closest they'll
get to Stanford or MIT) and fool around with the latest software
for graphics, robotics, and 3-D animation. Once strictly
mom and pop operations, computer camps are now a fast-growing
business with weekly price tags starting at $600 for day campers
and $900 for overnighters. The top three operators expect to attract
32,800 wannabe whizzes, up from 20,700 last summer. Only 20 percent
of their campers are girls, but that's way up from five years ago.
IDTech Camps of California pioneered with a girl-oriented week in
1999, including a video-production course. "We see a huge appetite
for kids wanting to learn technology," says Peter Findley, 27, CEO
and founder of Cybercamps, No. 2 in the industry with more than
40 locations nationwide. "Human beings learn better when they're
having fun." Although most schools now have Internet connections,
a lack of trained teachers has helped push programming out of curricula,
says Fairfield University engineering professor Michael Zabinski,
Ph.D., who founded the industry in 1977 with the first
National Computer Camp. As fun as it is to stare at
a computer screen, many camps force kids outside for at least part
of the day, if only for a frisbee game. "We teach kids it's important
to be well-rounded," says Findley. And they can still short sheet
the beds.
© 2001 U.S.News & World Report Inc. All rights reserved.
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