Team Time Across the World

Back in the 1980s, there used to be a super cheesy saying that was passed around a lot, mostly by middle-school science teachers.  It goes basically like this:

The earth is traveling through the Universe and around the sun at hundreds of thousands of miles per hour.  If you think about it, we’re all astronauts aboard Spaceship Earth!

Sweet! I’ve always wanted to be on a spaceship!

As corny as it sounds, I kind of like the idea.  Maybe the modern-day version is High School Musical’s “We’re All in this Together.”  It’s true.  What one country puts into the atmosphere drastically affects the rest of us.  An earthquake hits Haiti and generosity from America to Europe to Australia pours forth.  One person starting a “Free Hugs” campaign among their friends can echo across the globe.

The coolest thing about all 6 ½ billion of us chillin’ on Spaceship Earth together is that we are similar, yet so wildly different.  It all comes down to culture.  The way people celebrate the New Year differs drastically from country to country, city to city, even household to household.  The common theme is that we are all celebrating, right? (I’m not sure if there are any cultures that cry all day for New Years but if you find one let me know).  Culture is what unites and divides us.  It’s what gives us context for the ways in which we live our lives.

Oftentimes, we refer to the SuperCamp culture.  This culture includes how we speak, the type of music we play, our styles of learning, and especially our traditions (traditions!).  If you’ve only ever been to one SuperCamp session, it may be hard to imagine that camp could look any differently than the one you experienced.  If you have been to more than one session, you know that camps can look incredibly different from one session to another.  This past summer, I had the awesome opportunity to facilitate at four different sessions – in four different locations: Singapore, Wake Forest, Loyola Marymount, and San Marcos.  It was also my eighth summer working at SuperCamp.

Keeping that in mind, one of my favorite aspects of camp is Team Time.  I love the music, the energy, the dancing, the cheers, the screaming and madness that we Facilitators get to enjoy when we say those three magic words:

“Who Wants It?!”

Team Time is one of those things in camp that, in theory, seems like it should be the same from campus to campus, but in reality can be the most different.  Some camps like to applaud real hard after a cheer, while some prefer to go right to the team representative.  Some dance circles break it down to Vanilla Ice, while others like to “bust a move.”  We all know that power acknowledgements can be all over the place.

I think the best part about Team Time though, is how it defines so much of what we do at SuperCamp.  It’s about supporting each other and celebrating the common experience, while also completely loving all of the things that make us so different.  It doesn’t matter if the team on stage has to start their cheer over three times before they get it, we still cheer for them for so awesomely using Failure Leads to Success.

From my perspective this past summer, Team Time helped define how different each camp was from the next.  The way the kids in Singapore got funky on their dance circle was pretty different from Wake Forest, where half the time it was hard to figure out where the circle actually was because so many people were dancing at once.  The Junior Forum homies at Loyola Marymount loved to “mix it up” at the end of the daily dance-off, while San Marcos couldn’t get enough of the “hand-clap dance” (what what!).

Brown, Stanford, Seattle, Chi-town, and Colorado – everyone had their own amazing Team Time traditions.  It’s what made each camp its own.

Then again, we all have so much in common.  Being up on stage, repping your team – that’s something that every single person who went to camp this summer got to do.  Everyone had a chance to hop in a dance circle, to introduce a crazy new power whoosh, or to yell your team letter until the Facilitator chose you.  These are experiences we all shared whether camp was in Toyon Hall (Stanford) or Hagget Hall (Seattle).  It’s the kind of thing that makes someone stop you in the airport because you’re wearing an “I Feel Good” shirt (actually happened to me).  We may have gone to different camps and shared different experiences, but we have all been impacted by SuperCamp and Quantum Learning.

Knowing that SuperCamp 2011 is still a ways away, what can you do at home to create shared experiences among your friends?  They may have not gone to camp, but it’s very possible that they’d be interested in learning how to “mix it up.”  Or maybe you can create your own new traditions with your friends – most of you probably already have (hint: they’re called inside jokes).  These are the kinds of things that bring us closer to one another.  Shared experiences equal closer friendships.  Closer friendships equal fulfillment.  Fulfillment equals motivation.  And motivation equals getting what you want out of life.

Take a look at this video.  What do you notice about these Team Times?  What similarities and differences do you notice?  Comment below about what you see.

Your task, if you choose to accept it: Post on the SuperCamp Facebook page about one of your favorite traditions at camp.  It could be pretty cool to see how many “strangers” respond with stories similar to yours.  As crazy as life outside of SuperCamp seems sometimes, it’s good to remember that we’re all in this together.

School Can Be a Bit Grizzly – SuperCamp Can Help

Imagine you are taking a leisurely stroll through the forest (depending on where you live, this may be a daily occurrence for you). All of a sudden, you look up and there is a ginormous brown grizzly bear staring you straight in the face! What do you do?

Your first reaction may be to listen to the little voice in your head screaming, “ARE YOU CRAZY?? RUN FOR YOUR LIFE!!” But this response is not your best chance of getting out of that forest without doing a little dance with your new grizzly friend. The more rational reaction: stay calm, stand your ground, and thoroughly assess the situation before making your next move.

Think for a moment about something else that may be quickly approaching and also quite daunting. Yes, the beginning of another school year – new classes, new teachers, new drama. The instinctual response might be to fall back into your old habits. But now you’ve been to SuperCamp…and we’ve been fighting bears since 1982.

In order to make your camp-to-school transition smooth and ongoing, we at SuperCamp have created a number of strategies to assist you in holding onto those powerful strategies, mindsets, and goals you learned this summer:

  • Our grad support hub is QuantumLearner.com, which will be constantly updated throughout the year. This is where you and your parents can access pictures from your SuperCamp experience. One way to keep those memories fresh in your brain is to print off pictures of you and your friends at camp and post them near your ‘Homework Spot’ at home. This will help keep you pumped about using SuperCamp skills throughout the year. QuantumLearner.com is your first stop for Grad Support.
  • If you find that you can’t remember a certain strategy or have questions regarding how to handle a situation in a SuperCamp-like manner, call our Grad Support Hotline at 1-800-285-3276, extension 170. Leave a message (anything regarding SuperCamp skills and tools) and one of our trained SuperCamp Facilitators will call back with a refresher, pep talk, or whatever you need. You might even get to speak with a Facilitator who was at your camp! All of our Facilitators are dynamic, fun, and love to help.
  • Perhaps the most important and useful thing you can do – look over your SuperCamp playbook. You took that puppy home for a reason – utilize it!
  • Facebook! As you’re reading this, it’s very possible that you are also currently logged onto Facebook or have been at some point during the last 2 hours. With that knowledge, we have created a number of groups and support networks and even an official SuperCamp Facebook page as a way of bringing our world to yours. Keep in touch with your SuperCamp friends and staff members and look at pictures from camp to keep the good memories flowing. While Facebook is a great way to stay connected, if you have questions for staff about SuperCamp curriculum, your best bet is to call the Grad Support Hotline (800-285-3276 ×170).
  • Refresher videos will be available monthly on YouTube and QuantumLearner.com based on topics that are appropriate for the time of year, (i.e. test-taking skills in December for midterms). No boring lectures – all the awesomeness of SuperCamp in a quick, informative fashion.
  • If you’re interested in coming back to SuperCamp in 2011 (and you were a student in Senior Forum), we encourage you to come back on Leadership Training Team to further develop your skills while getting the chance to have a new, different camp experience. For more information, check out our teen summer camps page and scroll down to Leadership Training Team or call 1-800-285-3276.

We are so honored to have had you at SuperCamp this summer and are committed to making sure you get all the support you need to stand up to that bear we call school and make this year a success!

New SuperCamp Video!

This very exciting news for the SuperCamp world. First of all, because the old one was getting a tad outdated and it’s important for us to be able to show potential campers and their parents an accurate depiction of our summer camp experience. And secondly, because we love every opportunity we can get to show the world what SuperCamp is all about!

We captured over 30 hours of footage from SuperCamp programs at Cal State San Marcos and Stanford University in 2008, and through the magic of editing, came up with 6 1/2 minutes packed with action, emotion, education, and fun, just like SuperCamp itself. We also have a 17-minute “full version” of our summer camp video that you can request at SuperCamp.com.

Check out the video  below and let us know what you think. And if you or your kids attended a California summer camp at San Marcos or Stanford in 2008, there’s a good chance things will look quite familiar, and you may even be in it!

Why Do You Love SuperCamp?

Parents of SuperCamp graduates often make it a point to let us know about the amazing results they see in their kids after attending one of our summer programs. Among some of the most common include higher grades, breakthroughs in confidence and motivation, new-found communication and leadership skills, better reading speed and comprehension – the list goes on and on. Here, we compiled a few responses from parents of graduates from our 2008 California summer camps.

What was the biggest improvement you saw in your teen after ten days at SuperCamp?

That’s My Mom

Day 10 of SuperCamp – Graduation Day – can be bittersweet for many students. On one end of the emotional spectrum are feelings of sadness to be leaving all of the wonderful friendships they have developed in the ten short days of camp. At the other end, however, is the joy and excitement of being reunited with their parents (and cell phones) and going back to “real life” to finish out the summer.

On this day, campers are asked to go up on stage in front of parents and fellow grads to share something they learned or experienced while at camp and what learning and life skills they will take back to school with them. Here is a video of one camper from Senior Forum at Cal State San Marcos who shared a touching poem he wrote to his mom while at camp.

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