The Daily Telegraph

Summer educamp

Why you should send your children packing

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On the final day of the educationa­l summer camp he held in Wiltshire last summer, Henry Faber wandered through fields with a dozen of his young charges to the village store to buy postcards. He was surprised when the children then stuck their stamps in the middle of their cards.

“Technology has overtaken their lives,” says Faber, who last year launched Oppidan Education, which takes exam-weary prep-school children on mentored learning breaks.

“That postcard incident taught me something else,” he says. “I realised just how important summer camps are to help children go back to basics, to remind them what’s important, how to interact, and to recognise how they project themselves.”

With their stable of impressive mentors, Faber and his Oppidan co-founder Walter Kerr, both 25 (and graduates from Oxford and Durham respective­ly), will run six “mentored-learning” camps this summer.

While there have always been camps that teach the usual firemaking, burger-flipping and tying of knots, the Oppidan method is more Dead Poet’s Society, whereby a vibrant young graduate provides a small group of nine to 14-year-olds with an informal influence, and takes learning out of the classroom: improving children’s maths on a tennis court or analysing poetry on a boat.

The aim remains to help and support children preparing for pre-tests, Common Entrance and public exams, but in a more rounded and “off-grid” way than traditiona­l tutors, and equipping them with vital soft skills – public speaking, debating, pitching a business idea, not to mention sending a postcard.

Last year, they tried out their “invisible teaching” techniques at the prestigiou­s Peligoni Club in Zakynthos, Greece.

“I’d take five out on the baseline of the tennis court,” explains Kerr, “and give them questions relevant to their maths syllabus. For each right answer, they could take a step closer to the net, in order to get to play me at tennis and for them to take over as quizmaster.

“The idea of a student running a class, deciding and controllin­g what’s to be learned, was a novel concept for them. You’re reversing how learning usually happens, but it really works.”

So successful were their endeavours that when the pair returned home from Greece, they invested in two Indian bell tents, which can each sleep ten children, booked a friend to do the cooking, and created several camps, including one in France and another in the garden at Faber’s mother’s Wiltshire home. Including transport, teaching time and food, three-day camps cost from £450 per child.

“In the mornings,” says Faber, “there are a carousel of workshops; anything from public speaking to pitching a business idea and debating. There are treasure hunts and photograph­ic challenges.

“We tailor each camp for the time and place. If it’s the end of August, we focus on preparing them for starting school again – maybe creative writing, maths, a bit of science. We’ve taught about kinetic energy by firing rockets into the local village.”

When it comes to educationa­l camps to keep children busy – and learning – over the summer, it’s not just Oppidan who have upped the ante.

Camp Wilderness (campwilder­ness.co.uk), which operates in private woodlands in Oxfordshir­e, Hertfordsh­ire, Cheshire and Kent, offers outdoor adventure geared to modern kids’ high expectatio­ns. Knot-tying and fire-building alone no longer cut the mustard. It is now shelter-building, trapping, butchery and plant identifica­tion.

At Tech Camp (techcamp.org.uk), in Abingdon and Winchester among other locations, they learn to write computer programmes and make electronic devices to take home, like robots. Role Models (rolemodels.me), launched in 2014 by Durham graduate Hugo Shephard, teaches soft skills including problem-solving and team building.

However, among contempora­ry camps, Oppidan remains unique for its emphasis on enjoyable exam preparatio­n. They hope soon to expand into doing camps for older children because, as Faber observes, there are different challenges with teenagers.

For the time being, they are returning to the Peligoni for May half-term revision, and doing six three- to five-day camps this summer in various locations. Faber and Kerr are keen to keep things “small and cosy in beautiful settings, as opposed to becoming enormous and corporate”.

Here’s hoping the pair’s vision and enthusiasm will convert into A-stars, as well as happy memories, for their charges.

Oppidan Education (020 3409 3359, oppidanedu­cation.com)

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 ??  ?? Children gather round to cook during an Oppidan Education summer camp
Children gather round to cook during an Oppidan Education summer camp

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