Oak Summer Camp: Creativity, Confidence & Community

Mar 27, 2026 | Education

Summer camp: two kids playing with a parachute with different-sized balls on it.

Summer Camp as an Extension of Oak

Creativity, Confidence, and Community in Action

If you’ve ever watched your child come home from Oak with muddy shoes, glitter on their sleeves, and three new story ideas… summer camp at Oak is basically that energy on “extended play.”

Oak’s camps aren’t a separate universe from the school—they’re an extension of the same things families love during the year:

Creativity. Confidence. Community.

Just with more sunshine, more water bottles, and slightly more volume.

Below is how that looks in practice—and what recent research says about why it matters.

1. Creativity that doesn’t clock out for summer

During the school year, Oak learners create through art, music, nature projects, story writing, and building. Summer camp keeps that creative muscle active, just with more time and fewer formal “outcomes.”

Kids might:

  • Make cardboard cities in the shade, 
  • Paint with mud and found natural materials. 
  • Invent camp songs and silly skits. 
  • Build forts that turn into entire imaginary worlds. 

Studies on arts-inclusive and creative programs in childhood show that when kids regularly engage in art, music, and making, they tend to show better mood, more confidence, and greater engagement with learning—especially when the focus is on process, not perfection. [1][2][3]

In other words, all that “just crafting” is actually your child practicing:

  • Expressing emotions. 
  • Trying out ideas. 
  • Seeing themselves as someone who can make things happen. 

2. Confidence in small, real-world doses

Oak’s summer camps are built on the same small-group philosophy as the school: low ratios, familiar routines, and big feelings welcome.

That means more chances for your child to:

  • Try a new activity with gentle support. 
  • Lead a game, explain a rule, or present a creation. 
  • Navigate a small disagreement and repair it with help. 

Recent research on camps and outdoor/adventure programs shows that these kinds of experiences can boost self-esteem, self-efficacy (“I can do this”), and emotional self-control in just a week or two of camp [4][5][6]. Kids don’t need huge, dramatic “bravery moments”; lots of tiny risks—sharing an idea, joining a group, trying a new skill—add up.

At Oak, staff are very intentional about this. You’ll hear things like

  • “Do you want to try going first? I’ll stand right beside you.” 
  • “Let’s think of three ways you could solve this problem.” 
  • “You looked nervous, but you did it anyway. That’s brave.” 

Those moments land. They travel home in your child’s body language and stories long after camp is over.

3. Community that feels like a little village

One of the most powerful things camp can offer is a sense of “these are my people.”

Because Oak groups are small and consistent, campers get to:

  • See the same faces day after day, 
  • Build group traditions and inside jokes. 
  • Feel known by name, interests, and quirks—not just as “one of the kids.” 

A 2024 camp study found that supportive, caring leaders and a strong group climate were linked with increases in empathy, optimism, and feeling able to contribute to the community in young campers. [4] Other large-scale research with teens shows that feeling like you belong—at school or in structured programs—is associated with better mental health years down the line. [7]

Summer is a great time to practice that sense of belonging in a lower-pressure setting:

  • No grades 
  • More play 
  • Lots of time outside 
  • Space to reinvent yourself a little 

For shy, anxious, or sensitive kids, that smaller pond can make a big difference.

4. The Oak “secret sauce”: nature + creativity + care

If you zoom out, Oak’s camps keep returning to the same ingredients:

  • Nature – parks, lakeshore walks, outdoor games, forest-school style exploration 
  • Creativity – art, music, building, stories, performances 
  • Relationships – warm staff, small groups, real attention 
  • Choice and play – structured plans with room to follow children’s ideas 

Recent reviews of nature-based and adventure-style programs show that this mix supports well-being, social skills, resilience, and life satisfaction in children and youth. [5][6][8] That’s exactly the “extended Oak” experience: the same values as the school, stretched into long summer days.

So when you sign up for an Oak camp, you’re not just booking “a week of fun.”

You’re giving your child:

  • Extra practice being creative and courageous. 
  • More reps in feeling part of a community, 
  • A long, warm reminder that they are capable, interesting, and deeply welcome—exactly the things Oak works to nurture all year. 

References

  1.  Birrell, L., Cavanagh, A., Kornfeld, R., & Brown, S. (2024). The impact of arts-inclusive programs on young children’s mental health and wellbeing: A rapid review. Early Child Development and Care. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1080/03004430.2024.2319032
  2. Moula, Z., Palmer, K., & Walshe, N. (2022). A systematic review of arts-based interventions delivered to children and young people in nature or outdoor spaces: The impact on connection to nature, health and wellbeing. Frontiers in Psychology, 13, 858781. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.858781
  3. Keyes, H., Gradidge, S., Forwood, S. E., et al. (2024). Creating arts and crafting positively predicts subjective wellbeing. Frontiers in Public Health, 12, 1417997. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1417997
  4. Kirchhoff, E., Keller, R., & Blanc, B. (2024). Empowering young people—The impact of camp experiences on personal resources, well-being, and community building. Frontiers in Psychology, 15, 1348050. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1348050
  5. Vasilaki, M.-M., Zafeiroudi, A., Tsartsapakis, I., et al. (2025). Learning in nature: A systematic review and meta-analysis of outdoor recreation’s role in youth development. Education Sciences, 15(3), 332. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15030332
  6. A. Ghani, R. B., Lau, P. W. C., Lu, N., Zhou, P., & Wang, J. J. (2025). Investigating the impact of adventure education on children’s physical, cognitive and socio-emotional development: A mixed method systematic review. PLOS ONE, 20(6), e0327181. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0327181
  7. Allen, K.-A., Greenwood, C. J., Sciberras, E., et al. (2024). Adolescent school belonging and mental health outcomes in young adulthood: Findings from a multi-wave prospective cohort study. School Mental Health. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12310-023-09626-6
  8. Nagi, S., Kempe, S., Barriault, S., et al. (2025). Into the wild: A mixed-methods pilot study of the mental health benefits of a nature summer camp for urban children with psychological needs. BMC Public Health, 25, 647. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-025-21847-9
Daniela Urbina

Daniela Urbina

Daniela has been a member of the Oak Learners staff since 2022. She grew up in Colombia; she is a Psychologist from La Sabana University. She also took Homeschooling and Child Neurodevelopment, Neuroeducation and Neuropsychology courses at Ceenford and a study at the Queensland University of Technology about Inclusive Education: Essential knowledge for success.

Daniela has previous co-founded a non-profit foundation, where she developed and implemented some social impact projects, gave speeches, and created dynamic activities. She has experience working with kids between 15 months to 15 years old.

Daniela loves cycling, being active, learning daily, reading books and accepting new challenges. She believes the learning process should be fun and dynamic and that the student needs to know how to apply the knowledge to their lives. Teaching is her passion, and she tries to transmit this love to her students.


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