Bunk1: Summer camp all year long Transparent image  
Transparent image Transparent image Transparent image
Transparent image
 
Bunk1 features
  Our Privacy Policy
(for kids too!)
Transparent image
Transparent image
  Transparent image
Registered Users Sign In Here
Transparent image
 USERNAME:
Transparent image

Transparent image
 PASSWORD:
Transparent image


Lost Your Password?
Transparent image
Transparent image
  Transparent image
Registration
Transparent image
Camp Director, Camper, Parent, Staff...Bunk1 has something for you!
Register now
Transparent image
  Transparent image
General
Information

Transparent image
Bunk1 in the News
Transparent image
Tell a friend about Bunk1
Transparent image
About Us
Transparent image
Contact Us
Transparent image
Terms of Use
Transparent image
404 Park Ave. So.
Suite 1304
New York, NY 10016
P: 1-888-465-CAMP
F: 1-212-974-7850
Transparent image Transparent image
 
 
Camp Directors:  What can Bunk1 do for you?

Search Engine
Photo Gallery
Bunk Notes (1 way email)
Newsletter
Message Boards
Camp Stoore / Care Packages
Staffing Services
Online Surveys
Bunk1 Messenger
CD-Rom Photo Yearbook
Informational Web Sites
Custom Design Work
Bob Ditter / Experts Newsletter
Testimonials
Camp Vendors
 
   
 

Handouts from New England Fall Conference 10/19/01

- Boys Rap
- Closing Circle
- Counselor Group Skills
- COURAGE BEADS
- Girls Circle

Handouts from JCCA Professional Conference 11/4/01-11/07/01

- Where Camps are Vulnerable
- Gender-Related Behavior
- Working Effectively w/Parents


For a printer friendly
version, click here
.

You will need the Adobe Acrobat Reader to view PDF files. Download it here.


Subscribe now for only $11.99 per issue

- or -

$64.95 for a 6 month subscription
A savings of 10%!

Each month, you'll receive an emailed newsletter with a column by Bob Ditter and another industry expert. This content can only be found through Bunk1.com.

To Subscribe: Call Bunk1.com at 888-465-CAMP and mention "The Ditter Report" or email us at report@bunk1.com.

Be sure to include your camp name, contact name and phone #.

bob ditter / experts newsletter
PREVIOUS: custom design work     |     NEXT: testimonials

BACK TO MAIN EXPERTS PAGE

Courage Beads
[CLICK HERE FOR PRINTABLE VERSION]

Courage Beads is an activity adapted from Outward Bound's "Connecting With Courage" program for 12 and 13 year old girls. In the context of this course, courage is defined as more than moments of physical courage. Rather, courage is expanded to include 'moral courage.' Annie Rogers, a leading researcher on adolescent girls, rediscovered an ancient definition of courage that aptly applies to girls' needs today. She shares her discovery of the meaning of courage as "to speak one's mind while telling all one's heart." This definition is lived during Connecting With Courage. One way it's done is through Courage Beads.

Background

  • While on their 14-day course, girls are presented with a lanyard with one bead on it.
  • Staff model receiving a courage bead by describing a moment when they felt courageous. It is important for staff to set a tone here by selecting rather ordinary moments where one "told one's heart" rather than selecting some extraordinary moment of illness or sadness. It's okay if those moments of greater personal challenge are shared, but to get started it is better to begin with more ordinary, day-to-day acts of courage.
  • Over the next two weeks there are several times when the group (of 8 to 12 girls) gathers to share moments when each girl felt she was courageous. She shares her story with the group and takes a bead. This ritual becomes an important way for girls to express their thoughts and feelings and they come to rely on the safety and trust of the group to share intimate and important moments. After a short time, girls can bring the group through this ritual with no help from adults.

Goals
1) For girls to acknowledge their strengths and abilities to each other and develop peer encouragement to build on those strengths; 2) to develop positive ways for girls to acknowledge each other's skills, strengths and talents; and 3) to practice speaking and saying things that are difficult for girls (truth about friendships, conflict, etc.)

Materials: A lanyard (necklace size) and various types of beads. The beads can be in a bowl or placed into several zip-loc bags, one for each girl in the group.

Procedure
Have girls sit in a circle and create a quiet discussion tone. Review your agreements around meeting: (1) one person speaks at a time; (2) everyone speaks for herself; (3) No put downs- everyone is respected here. Ask, "What does courage mean to you?" Elicit some responses. Why is courage important? How does it help you become a better person? Ask if anyone has any good courage stories. Make sure that courage is not just defined as physical courage, but that the girls are thinking about moments of 'moral' courage - moments where they have spoken up in defense of a friend, for example, and gone against the expected norms to defend something they believed in.

Tell the girls that you want them to be courageous at camp and that you want to take time every few days to let them reflect on moments when they have been. Ask for some examples of times when courage might be important at camp. These examples will hopefully include reflections of the rules and norms you have already laid out for girls. If not, you give concrete examples for them and ask the for other examples.

Explain that every week, your bunk will have a girls' circle and that's when you can describe your moment of courage to the group and take a bead for your necklace. (An alternate way of getting a bead is for each girl in the circle to have her own store of beads, from which she gives a bead Courage Beads [continued] to the girl who speaks her courage. This is a more personal way of having girls acknowledge one another).

Setting Ground Rules
Ask girls if they want to create any rules for the girls' circle meeting. (See the 8 fundamental principles of a girls' circle for some good examples for adult guidelines.) The 'rule' discussion should be taken seriously- take notes, write on flip chart paper so everyone knows and agrees on the rules and make sure you are specific and (as the adult) know how to help girls enforce them. The adult role is to make the rules work! Make the ceremony as simple or as elaborate as you like, but most importantly, it should reflect your values, your camp culture and thus, be authentic for the girls.

At that point you can present a cup or bowl of beads and tell the girls that they can take their first bead, if they feel ready. Can they describe a moment of courage that they experienced in coming to camp this summer?

Encourage journal writing about moments of courage. Girls can read from their journals to share a courage story.

Make it Special
The ritual should be made to feel special. Remember, this is to encourage talking and sharing of feelings and emotions. This is not necklace-making! Beads should be simple enough to discourage sharing just to get a favorite bead. Beads should be similar so there's no fighting over a special one.

RETURN TO TOP OF PAGE

 
   
 

Questions? Comments? Contact us.