Many people see summer camps as a break from learning, a time to relax, unwind, and step away from routine.
But in the early years, learning doesn’t switch off.
Children are constantly observing, questioning, testing, and making sense of the world. The real question is not whether learning continues in summer, but what kind of learning we offer during this time.
A thoughtfully designed summer camp can do something powerful:
It can prevent learning loss, not by replicating school, but by creating richer, more meaningful opportunities for children to think, explore, and express.
Moving Beyond “Keeping Children Busy”
At Circles & Cycles, our May 2026 Summer Camp is built around a simple but profound question:
What moves?
This question becomes the anchor for a five-week exploration where children investigate motion—not as a concept to be taught, but as something to experience, test, and revisit.
Because in the early years, STEM and literacy are deeply connected.
When children explore movement, they are also:
- speaking and listening
- drawing and representing ideas
- building and revising theories
- telling stories based on real experiences
They are not just learning science.
They are using multiple languages to make meaning.
As the Reggio Emilia approach reminds us, children are active constructors of knowledge, constantly engaging with the world around them and forming their own understandings .
Why Summer Camps Like This Matter
1. They Prevent Learning Loss By Deepening Learning
Learning in early childhood is not about memorising facts. It is a spiral process, where children revisit ideas again and again, each time building deeper understanding.
Summer camps that are grounded in exploration allow children to:
- return to the same ideas across days and weeks
- test new theories
- refine their thinking
This kind of repetition is not redundancy;it is how learning strengthens.
Without these opportunities, children risk losing not just information, but momentum in their thinking.
2. They Give Children Time to Think
During the school year, time is often structured and compressed.
Summer camps offer something rare: time to linger.
Time to:
- stay with a question
- try multiple approaches
- experience failure and revision
As meaningful learning requires experiences to be revisited and reflected on over time, these slower rhythms are essential for deep understanding .
3. They Position Children as Researchers
In this camp, books are not used to “teach” concepts.
They are used to provoke thinking.
Each week, a carefully chosen text opens a new doorway into movement—inviting children to question, investigate, and construct their own explanations.
This aligns with a key idea in early childhood pedagogy: learning happens most powerfully when environments and materials are designed to spark curiosity and exploration .
A Closer Look: The “What Moves?” Journey
Each week builds on the previous one, allowing children to revisit and expand their understanding of motion.
Week 1: Push, Pull, and Getting Stuck
Sheep in a Jeep introduces motion through humour and rhythm.
Children explore:
- What makes something move—or stop
- How pushing and pulling changes outcomes
- Cause and effect through real experiences
This week is rich in storytelling, reenactment, and collaborative thinking.
Week 2: Invisible Forces
Gravity expands children’s thinking beyond what they can see.
They begin to ask:
- What makes things fall?
- Can something move without being touched?
Here, children move into abstract thinking—building theories about forces they cannot directly observe.
Week 3: Balance and Instability
Balancing Act shifts the focus to stillness within movement.
Children investigate:
- What keeps something stable
- Why structures fall
- How small changes affect outcomes
This week is filled with testing, redesigning, and problem-solving.
More Than STEM—A Way of Thinking
While this camp is rooted in STEM, what children are really developing is a way of thinking:
- Asking meaningful questions
- Testing and revising ideas
- Communicating through multiple languages
- Learning with and from others
They are learning how to learn.
And perhaps most importantly, they are experiencing themselves as capable thinkers.
As Loris Malaguzzi emphasised, children are not empty vessels but strong, competent individuals with the ability to construct their own understanding of the world .
Rethinking Summer
Summer doesn’t have to be a pause.
It can be a continuation—a deepening—a different rhythm of learning.
When camps are designed with intention, they:
- prevent learning loss
- nurture curiosity
- build confidence
- and honour the natural ways children learn
Because when children are given time, space, and meaningful experiences, learning doesn’t just continue.