Zombie STEM Summer Camp

Saving the world from zombies... one brain at a time.



Welcome to Zombie STEM Summer Camp



Where adventure, learning, and friends await!

Our mission is to create life long learners who want to make a difference in the world. We do this by emotionally engaging our campers in safe, fun, and educational adventures where they are excited about learning science, languages, world cultures, history, myths & legends, and more in order to solve the mystery in which they are the Hero. Our company values are courage, honor, and compassion – which are also the attributes of our heroes.

Parents (and Campers): Your child or teen (Defender) will have a blast with all of the STEM-based activities and adventure at our licensee’s Zombie STEM Summer Camp… and learn a thing to two in the process. Many of the activities are designed to promote education while campers strive to solve the mysteries before them. For example:

  • Staff who are resources for the young Defenders as they research the various civilizations and past technology from real world history, literature and mythology. The science lab even allows campers to learn about math, DNA, physics, and biology (vital knowledge for defeating zombies).
  • Campers learn basic first aid skills (comes in handy after a zombie attack)
  • Campers learn how to plan to obtain objectives and reach long term goals (you can’t win a battle without strategies and tactics).
  • Campers learn about biology, environmental sciences and conservation (the Defenders are the protectors of the land of Sidleterra, their source of adventure, life and resources).
  • Each year, the story is based on a classic piece of literature which the Defenders have to discover in order to uncover the solution to saving the world from certain doom.

“Sessions end with a climactic final battle, with campers streaming across outdoor fields, engaged in furious combat maneuvers. The zombie battles are particularly ferocious,” – The Boston Globe

What To Expect

Zombie Summer Camps strive to provide your child or teen with thrilling and educational STEM-based adventures that will be remembered for years to come. You should, therefore, discuss with your young hero beforehand what they can expect. Adventures involve staff and other campers dressed in costumes, makeup, and masks that can be frightening to some. (Think “Haunted House”, but where you actually get to fight the monsters with foam swords and you learn something!)

There might be adventures with low lighting or a quest that takes the kids into a darkened maze. The key to their success and enjoyment is to stay calm and remember that this is all just make believe. At any time, a child can ask a monster for help if he or she is hurt or truly frightened. These monsters are people too!




COURAGE

The ability to do something that frightens one; strength in the face of adversity.



HONOR

High respect; great esteem, adherence to what is right despite the influence or pressure of others.



COMPASSION

Empathy, care, and concern for the mistreatment, suffering, or misfortunes of others.





TACTICAL TRAINING


Campers learn how to use their Nerf Blasters and incorporate team tactics so that their group can withstand the hordes of monsters and undead that plague the camp.



SCIENTIFIC METHOD


Campers in the Research & Development Division will learn how to formulate hypotheses and conduct experiments. They use their research and findings in their ongoing mission to develop a cure for the Zombie epidemic, and keep up with the rapid biological mutations the monsters go through every year.



RIDDLE
SOLVING


The Team Leaders will help Adventurers learn about the history of the encampment and why it is haunted by zombies.



UNLOCKING THE STORY


Each summer, the story is based on a novel from classic literature. George Orwell’s 1984, Fahrenheit 451, and other dystopian classics. Clues in these books are important keys to solving mysteries, discovering treasure, and restoring peace to the land.



Safety and Risk


The camp is constantly attentive to your child’s physical and emotional well being:

  • There are rules of conduct and special equipment to help keep our events safe.
  • Campers have an “Overload” word that allows them to exit an adventure if it’s too scary.
  • There are adventures that are rated for different levels of “scariness” so that campers who are frightened easily can opt to attend a less intense interaction.
  • During sparring sessions there is an assigned Safety Marshal who does not participate in the sparring.
  • Staff are trained in safe conduct and assessment as well as emergency response.  

 


Even though the safety record for our licensees are impressive, they train for and try to consider the unknown. Since camps are often owned and run by parents whose own children attend, safety is part of the regular assessment for each activity.

These camps and events are filled with physical interactions. There are both indoor and outdoor excursions where kids run and play like healthy, active kids should do. As such, we and our licensees cannot guarantee that a child will not experience risks associated with physical contact activities in a dynamic environment. Trips and falls do happen. Excited kids sometimes don’t look where they are running. An accidental hard hit with a foam sword can be scary.

This is not like sitting in a living room, playing a computer game. There are risks. But be assured that your child will also be at a higher risk for having serious fun… and an increased chance of burning calories, learning important skills, and making friends of the real kind instead of the virtual kind.


 

Letter from Licensed Camp Directors:

Take a moment to look over this article called The Overprotected Kid by Hanna Rosin. What was your reaction to the kind of environmental dangers found in “The Land”? Were you one of those who thought, “This is insane”?

Children grow up in a very different environment today than 30 years ago, and there has not been a consensus on whether this is good or bad. Most likely, it’s a little of both. Parents today are challenged to construct an environment for their kids that protects them from danger without missing out on the personal growth that comes from making mistakes, getting into trouble, even getting hurt.

Then again, there’s a fine line between giving children the freedom to experience danger and allowing them, through their inexperience, to cause themselves serious harm. Active parents have to analyze the environment that they construct for their children with this balance in mind. As Rosin points out, the lengths that parents go to with the intent of insulating their children from danger ultimately have very little effect on their odds of falling victim to the catastrophes that we might see on the news or in a movie.

At the same time, what is lost when parents too often place themselves between their children and a perceived danger? Rosin projects consequences as severe at “more fearful children and increased levels of psychopathology.” But fundamentally, what is lost is the child’s ability to engage in risky behavior with the understanding that consequences may follow. This is a critical adaptive tool for adults, making risky behavior a very important part of a child’s development.

To allow children to learn how to adapt to risk while avoiding major danger, communities need to contribute by building dedicated locations for kids to encounter danger, to behave in a way that is out of control, and to become exposed to the consequences of that behavior. Places like “The Land” provide a model for an environment that a child can shape to match their imagination, and where they can grow into strong and adaptive adults.

At our camps, kids are engrossed in activities involving physical contact… they are hitting each other and getting hit by our staff with swords! They are running around, tripping and falling, getting bruised, scraped, and on a rare occasion, ending up with a cast (Owner Meghan Gardner’s youngest daughter) or stitches. Yes, it happens. How many of you parents reading this escaped an adventurous childhood free from a trip to the hospital? The hospital trip is not the objective… it’s just a possible sidebar journey for any active child.

We pride ourselves in our mature staff who are trained intensively and who make good decisions. But the truth is, our staff are human and cannot foresee every circumstance. They cannot prevent every painful moment. The more physically dynamic any activity is, the more the kids are at a greater risk of serious injury. They are also at a greater risk of having some serious fun!

Note: Classes, events, and camps use foam weapons and masks which are constructed with latex.