Spring is time for cleaning, tax refunds, and making plans for summer!
There’s no better place for young athletes to stay active, learn new skills, and make new friends than at a summer sports camp. And for parents, sports camps provide an alternative to having the kids hang around the house, surf YouTube, and complain that there’s nothing to do.
Summer camps are big business ($18 billion, according to the American Camp Association) and the number of choices in sports camps can be overwhelming. Not only do camps exist for every sport (and even specific positions) imaginable, they vary wildly in intensity, cost, and objective.
In order to pick a camp your young athlete will enjoy and learn from, parents should ask themselves the following questions.
Sport camps range in focus from casual fun to extreme specialization. Talking to your athlete and taking their interest and ability levels into consideration can help you place them in the camp category that’s best for them:
Once you have decided what type of camp environment is best, it is also important to consider who will be doing the coaching. Almost all sports camps include this information on their website or brochure. A camp run by a recently-retired pro or collegiate star may be a neat experience for your athlete, but they may not necessarily be as good at coaching as someone whose been instructing athletes of different skill levels for 20+ years.
In many cases, you might even be able to find video of the coach or coaches speaking at a camp or coaching drills. This can give you some context as to the coaching staff’s demeanor, so you can decide if it’s an environment your athlete would respond well to.
While memories of traditional summer camps might make you think of a mass of children for every one camp counselor, many sports camps are not like that.
Some, especially those with the goal of rapidly developing skills for athletes with prior experience, offer much more individual attention and a coach:athlete ratio closer to a dozen or fewer athletes per every coach. Camps that use sports to encourage socializing usually have a higher ratio, but also provide a greater opportunity to meet new people.
If this information can’t be gleaned from the camp’s site, try asking for it via email.
Beyond the registration fee, there can be additional costs associated with attending a summer sports camp. Some may require athletes to purchase and bring specific equipment, sun protection, or other items. They may have “outing fees” (e.g. a few dollars to cover the cost of shoes and a ball on a field trip to a bowling alley). While many camps provide meals, others ask athletes to bring a packed lunch and/or snacks to eat. If it’s not an overnight camp, the cost of the commute is also important to keep in mind.
TrueSport® is a grassroots movement born and powered by the experience and values of USADA–the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency. The TrueSport® mission is simple and bold: to change the culture of youth sport by providing powerful educational tools to equip young athletes with the resources to build the life skills and core values for lasting success on and off the field.
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