Queen鈥檚 welcomes back summer camps

Queen鈥檚 welcomes back summer camps

Over 3,000 youth will attend Queen鈥檚 camps over the next two months.

By Victoria Klassen, Media Relations Officer

July 8, 2022

Share

Three QCamps students participating in different sports

The scenic Queen鈥檚 campus is once again a bustling centre of daily activity as children of all ages participate in the popular Queen鈥檚 summer camps.

During the last two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, many Queen鈥檚 camps transitioned to online camps or offered free virtual programming to keep youth engaged. Queen鈥檚 University is excited to once again be back in person for its summer camp offerings.

Summer camp season kicked off on July 4, with 10 Queen鈥檚 camps offering in-person programs 鈥 from science to drama, art to eco-adventures, and from math to sports. Together, Queen鈥檚 Camps annually welcome over 3,000 youth through the camps and employ more than 100 post-secondary students. These camps are run by both on-campus student groups and the university itself.

鈥淪cience Quest has been running since 1988. This is our first year back since the pandemic, and we're very happy to be returning to in-person activities,鈥 says Emily Lind, head director of . 鈥淜inder and junior campers are having a great time learning about science through activities like building an elastic-powered car or a balloon-powered rocket. Senior campers can choose from robotics, computing or science/engineering camps. We also have girls-only programming, and are offering the Tyendinaga Bus Program.鈥

What鈥檚 New?

Along with the return of in-person Queen鈥檚 camps, there are some exciting new programs being offered.

The (QSEA) is offering a QSEA Girls Program, and a QSEA Black Youth in STEM program for the first time this year. Both programs are free and are aimed at reducing barriers for these under-represented groups.

Queen's Athletics & Recreation, the leading camp provider in the Kingston area with their , is offering some new camps including the Gaels Rugby: Junior & Senior Skills, Survivor Camp, and Code, Create & Play with Code Ninjas. Similarly, the has teamed up with Q-Camps for a jointly offered Arts and Sports Camp.

Children playing squash
Q-Camps campers playing squash.

鈥淲e鈥檙e delighted to see a return of children and youth programming through Queen鈥檚 Athletics & Recreation this summer. Our Q-Camps programs offer a wide variety of camps from ages five to 18 with an emphasis on physical literacy and sport for life. We utilize the talents of our Queen鈥檚 students and their backgrounds in physical activity, sport, teaching, and instruction along with their own studies and interests, to provide a really diverse and exciting range of activity,鈥 says Sarah Utting, Coordinator Youth Programs and Community Engagement, Queen鈥檚 University Athletics & Recreation. 鈥淲e hope the camps introduce youth in our community to a variety of ways to get active and delivered in a way that encourages a sense and spirit of discovery to build self-esteem, teamwork, and skill.鈥

Find out more about Queen鈥檚 Camps and their offerings here.

Smith Engineering
Arts and Science