The Sentinel-Record

For many kids, camp means powering down

- LEANNE ITALIE

NEW YORK — If teens are so attached to their phones and all things connected, why do so many of them wind up in no-device summer camps with smiles on their faces?

Thirteen-year-old Daniela Blumenfeld of Scarsdale, New York, just finished her fifth summer at sleepaway camp with no devices beyond a simple iPod. “I didn’t really miss my phone,” she said, especially given camp distractio­ns like banana boating — that is, riding a yellow, banana-shaped inflatable towed by a motorboat.

America’s summer camps have gone device-free in a big way. Most sleepaway camps moved to ban personal electronic­s years ago, driven by the idea that campers should soak up the scenery, sports, crafts and camaraderi­e their parents are shelling out hundreds of dollars for, all in service to slower living and a rest for their still-developing brains.

But the big news may be that many kids seem not to mind at all.

About 90 percent of the nearly 8,400 sleepaway camps counted by the American Camp Associatio­n are now device free, though some allow limited time with screenless iPods and other internet-free music players.

A few teen-only programs provide cabin Wi-Fi and will let smartphone­s, laptops or tablets through the door so long as they’re kept in cabins and bunk areas. Some camps provide scheduled computer and internet time — partly for coding, app developmen­t or website design classes built into their curricula, and partly for limited time on games such as the immensely popular Fortnite, an online multiplaye­r survival/ shooting experience.

Among other things, camps don’t want to be responsibl­e for loss or damage to pricey technology brought from home, despite sneaky helicopter parents who mail phones in care packages and equally sneaky campers who stash them in their bunks.

Sometimes reverse psychology helps. Nigel Watson, camp director at the French Woods Sports and Arts Center, a high school-only sleepaway camp in the Catskills near New York, recalls spending his days at previous jobs confiscati­ng smartphone­s and his evenings calling parents to report infraction­s.

“If you found one, they’d have another. Some brought three to camp. It was almost where I needed a full-time policeman to take care of it,” he said. At French Woods, though, Watson lets kids use phones and other devices in their cabins, but nowhere else, so long as they power them down at lights-out.

His surprising finding: The phones often end up in a drawer after a few days at camp. “They’re more often than not just comfort blankets,” Watson said.

For other kids, device-free camp also serves as a valuable, if brief, time-out from games, social media and other increasing­ly persistent digital distractio­ns. Caleb Santana, an 11-year-old from North Babylon on New York’s Long Island, just spent a week at a sleepaway Christian camp in the Pennsylvan­ia woods. That meant no Fortnite. Caleb, one of four kids, said it was a breeze, although a longer break might have been a problem.

But he’s making up for lost time now that he’s home.

“The Fortnite is a big deal, more than a phone,” said his mother, Dorothy Gia Santana. “Since he got home he’s been up to 3 in the morning some days playing.”

Caleb, however, insists he has other plans for spending the remainder of his summer. “I want to get out and do stuff with my friends,” he said. “I won’t be playing Fortnite the whole time.”

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