June 18, 2018
18-148

VSU’s Camp Invention Gives Kids Freedom to Dream, Create

2018 Camp Invention attendees were able to work with robotic dogs and learn about engineering and biology along the way.

Camp Invention

Camp Invention helps kids discover the fields of science, technology, engineering, and math through building things like this mini mansion equipped with smart technology.

VALDOSTA — The sounds of excited elementary schoolers filled classrooms in Nevins Hall June 11-15 as Valdosta State University hosted its seventh Camp Invention, a weeklong summer program that gives students in kindergarten through sixth grade the chance to dream, innovate, and create in the areas of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM).

In one classroom, participants built mini mansions equipped with smart technology and cutting-edge gadgets. One room over the young campers acted as futuristic veterinarians, working with robotic dogs and learning engineering and biology principles along the way.

“This camp makes them think outside of the box,” said Alisha Sirmans, a Lanier County pre-k teacher who has taught at Camp Invention for the last five years. “It exposes them to a variety of different subjects and lets them do things that they normally wouldn’t get to do in a regular classroom.

“Here things are hands-on. They get to learn, and they get to be free. They’re not confined to a chair or stuck taking a test. They get to take things apart and put things together. They get to come up with ideas and then bring those ideas to life.”

Dr. Denise Reid, professor of mathematics and coordinator of VSU’s Camp Invention, said the program’s activities are essential to future growth in STEM fields. 

“The world is changing, and we need to be able to move forward with it. If you want to have people who can design this technology in the future and build these things, you need to have kids who are interested in it, and you need to foster that and nurture it early on.” 

Camp Invention becomes a family affair for many as kids and their siblings attend year after year, ready to discover new worlds of creativity and innovation.

Reid’s daughters, Rena, 17, and Callie, 15, both attended Camp Invention for many years and now participate as counselors, and her son Jacob, 12, attended for all seven years and was a counselor-in-training this summer. Additionally, Dr. Reid’s husband, Lamar, who is a teacher at Atkinson County Middle School, has volunteered to help direct the camp for the past seven years. 

Jacob said that even after all his years with the program, “there’s still so much more to explore at Camp Invention.”

VSU’s Department of Mathematics hosts Camp Invention annually in partnership with the National Inventors Hall of Fame. It is the only nationally recognized nonprofit elementary enrichment program inspired by the brightest thinkers around — the National Inventors Hall of Fame inductees. All activities are designed to be fun, hands-on, challenging, and age-appropriate, with a focus on encouraging problem-solving, teamwork, innovation, and entrepreneurship.

Camp Invention attendees invent something new every day, from a dancing dinosaur to a cupcake catapult, and explore fun realities, such as the chemistry of magnetic slime, as they experience what it is like to be a physicist, engineer, and entrepreneur. Through collaboration, discovery, and invention prototyping, they are able to solve real-world issues.

On the Web:
www.campinvention.org

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