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Summer Camps for 6th Graders
Create succulent stories and poems.
Creative writing makes science come alive at The Foothills Learning Center. In this full-day camp, explore Boise’s foothills with a pencil and notebook in hand. Together with a Cabin teaching-writer and a naturalist, you’ll observe our native environment and translate what you learn to wildly original poetry and stories.
A collaboration of The Cabin and Jim Hall Foothills Learning Center.
Narrative is at the heart of humankind, with stories informing our understanding of the world for centuries. But how do we foster a deeper knowledge of our truths and our shared history? Join us in this all-day camp where you’ll dive into the foundation of human rights and, using works inspired by great writers and activists, you’ll write your truth and learn how we’re all woven together in an interconnected fabric of the past, present, and future.
Find your truth and write your story.
Joan Didion said, “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.” But how do we share those stories? How do we write them? Through powerful language, truth, and our unique vision of the world. Work with an experienced teaching-writer from The Cabin to tell your story (or poem), shaping your words into language that leaps off the page and stays with your reader forever.
Who says you have to choose between worlds?
Get the best of both in this graphic-storytelling camp where you’ll blend visual and written storytelling. Engage your readers with action-packed plots! Make them chuckle with outlandish character shenanigans!
Through exploration of popular graphic texts and crusading around town for ideas, you’ll learn the tools to create a graphic story of your own.
Create a play you can take from the page to the stage.
It’s five minutes to curtain – are you ready? Work alongside a professional playwright to learn the essential tools of playwriting (like plot, action, character, and dialogue) to build a one act play from the ground up. Participate in acting exercises to experience the collaborative process that can make writing for theater feel like anything is possible.
Write for the eye, with your soul as your guide.
Cave paintings. Hieroglyphics. Graffiti. Even before letters, we told stories through pictures. Explore the raw power of connecting words and images as you work to bring visual poems and stories alive with characters, plot, and a rich background. With excursions about town and graphic texts to draw from, discover how to produce collages, comics, illustrated poems, calligraphy, and stories meant for the eye.
Build a (strange) new world in this sci-fi/fantasy fiction camp
Zombies, dragons, robots, oh my! Kick things off by working with other writers to build the rules for the fantastical realm of your dreams. With your teaching-writer/wizard guiding you about town, let your imagination boil and bubble as you create an original short story inspired by this strange land – all while learning the spells behind all good stories, like plot, dialogue, character, and setting.
Princesses, Pirates, Pioneers! Kick things off by working with other writers to collect elements of a story from eras in history.
With your teaching-writer/master historian guiding you around some of Boise’s historic monuments and museums, let your imagination run wild as you create an original short story inspired by historic events and people – all while learning the timelessness of all good stories, through elements like plot, dialogue, character, setting, and vivid detail.
Get inspired by meeting the raptors soaring above us.
Did you know the owl turns his head because his eyes can’t move? Or that the peregrine falcon is the fastest animal on Earth? Get an up-close look at vultures, eagles, and some of the globe’s largest hawks at the World Center for Birds of Prey. Hear from scientists about important bird conservation projects – then, strike out with your Cabin teaching-writer to transform your new, ornithological knowledge into raptor-inspired poems and short stories.
Learn a new language through the eyes of an animal.
What does an anteater smell? How do giraffes sleep? What do turtles fear most? Start this all-day camp at Zoo Boise each morning for zoo-educator-led activities that provide a better understanding of animals and the dangers they face, as well as how you can work for conservation. In the afternoon, head to The Cabin, where you’ll work with a teaching-writer to hone your creative writing skills and create a collection of reptilian and amphibian-inspired poems and short stories.
Note: This is an all-day camp. Pack a lunch!
“I wrote an actual book”
–Denver, Grade 4