Camp TLC SQUAD / Bridge Builders

Bridge Builders

Practice connection, repair, inclusion, and respectful disagreement through a camp-style bridge-building challenge.

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A bridge does not mean everyone agrees. A bridge gives people a safe way to cross a gap without tearing each other down.

This is a camp-style connection and repair activity. Campers work in teams, draw “gap” scenarios, choose bridge tools, and build a response that helps people reconnect, include someone, or move forward respectfully.

Why This Session Works

Core message: Strong groups are not groups with no conflict. Strong groups know how to notice a gap, choose a bridge tool, and repair connection before the gap gets bigger.

Connection to belonging

At 14 and 15, social gaps can show up fast: someone feels left out, a joke lands wrong, a group splits into sides, a new camper struggles to join, or two people disagree about what is fair. This session gives campers concrete language for what to do next.

Youth development move: The goal is not to force friendship or fake harmony. The goal is to practice repair, inclusion, boundaries, and respectful disagreement in a way that still feels like camp.

Pitch to Fellow Counselors

"Bridge Builders is about what campers do when there is a gap between people."

"The gap might be a misunderstanding, hurt feeling, disagreement, new camper, awkward silence, or someone getting left out. We are not asking campers to share personal drama. We are giving them fictional scenarios and practical tools."

"This is useful because a lot of camp problems do not start as major issues. They start as small gaps that nobody knows how to cross."

How this supports values and identity: Campers practice being the kind of person who can include, listen, apologize, ask for help, and set a boundary. That makes bridge-building a visible identity skill, not just a nice idea.

Group Plan: 6 Counselors / 10 Kids

3 groups: two groups of 3 campers, one group of 4 campers. 2 counselors per group, ideally one male and one female per group when possible.

Group Campers Counselors Why
Group 1 2 girls, 1 boy 1 female, 1 male Small group for scenario choice and role rotation.
Group 2 2 girls, 1 boy 1 female, 1 male Small group for balanced discussion and executive-function support.
Group 3 2 girls, 2 boys 1 female, 1 male Slightly larger group with enough adult support for inclusion and pacing.
Adult team roles
  • Lead Facilitator

    Explains the bridge metaphor, holds emotional safety, and leads debrief.

  • Materials Lead

    Handles cards, markers, paper strips, tape, and cleanup.

  • Float Counselor

    Supports groups that get stuck, too personal, or dominated by one voice.

  • Tone Watcher

    Redirects teasing, gossip, forced apologies, or fake repair.

  • Timekeeper

    Calls time for each round and keeps the session moving.

  • Accessibility Support

    Checks reach, seating, visuals, movement options, and pacing.

Safety guardrail: Do not let campers name real conflicts, pressure anyone to apologize, or make someone role-play a personal situation. Keep examples fictional and group-based.

Safety Checklist

Core rule: A bridge is not a forced friendship. A good bridge can be an apology, an invitation, a boundary, a question, or asking an adult for help.

Setup Walkthrough

This is what should be prepared before campers arrive.

Best prep: 45–60 minutes before session
Group kit checklist
Room setup: 20 minutes
  1. 0–5
    Safety scan

    Check space, exits, surfaces, cords, obstacles, heat, lighting, and noise.

  2. 5–8
    Table layout

    Set one group kit at each table. Leave room for mobility devices and easy turns.

  3. 8–11
    Post visuals

    Post the bridge-building steps and a simple sample bridge.

  4. 11–14
    Limit choices

    Start each group with three gap cards, six tool cards, and four value cards.

  5. 14–17
    Assign adults

    Confirm lead, materials, floater, tone watcher, and timekeeper.

  6. 17–20
    Final check

    Timer ready, roster ready, cleanup plan ready.

No-Prep Fallback

If you did not prepare in advance, run the simplified version.

Tradeoff: The no-prep version works, but it gives less executive-function support. Counselors must keep the examples fictional and the choices visible.

What you need

20-minute no-prep version

  1. 0–3
    Frame

    "A bridge helps people cross a gap. It does not force everyone to agree."

  2. 3–8
    Pick a gap

    Use one fictional camp situation.

  3. 8–13
    Choose tools

    Pick two bridge tools that fit the situation.

  4. 13–18
    Build response

    Name one sentence, one action, and one boundary.

  5. 18–20
    Share

    One gap, one tool, one respectful next step.

Opening Script

"This activity is called Bridge Builders."

"A bridge is what we use when there is a gap between people. The gap might be a misunderstanding, a hurt feeling, a disagreement, or someone feeling left out."

"We are not using real names or real camp drama. We are going to use example cards and choose tools that could help people move forward respectfully."

"A bridge does not mean forced friendship. Sometimes the best bridge is an apology. Sometimes it is an invitation. Sometimes it is a boundary. Sometimes it is asking an adult for help."

45-Minute Session

Use the timer if helpful. It saves nothing outside this device.

Facilitation Timer
45:00

Use this as a rough guide, not a rigid rule.

  1. 0–5
    Roll call + frame

    Read names aloud. Explain the bridge metaphor and no-real-names rule.

  2. 5–10
    Bridge Values

    Groups choose two values that should guide bridge-building.

  3. 10–18
    Gap Round 1

    Groups draw one gap card, choose two bridge tools, and name one next step.

  4. 18–28
    Gap Round 2

    Groups draw a harder gap and build a fuller response: words, action, boundary.

  5. 28–36
    Bridge Build

    Groups create a paper bridge with one tool written on each piece.

  6. 36–42
    Share-out

    Groups share one gap, one tool, one sentence, and one next step.

  7. 42–45
    Close + headcount

    Each camper chooses one bridge tool to remember. Complete final count.

Detailed Activity Walkthrough

Part 1: Bridge Values

Each group chooses two values that should guide connection and repair.

  • Respect: Treat people like they matter, even during disagreement.
  • Honesty: Say what is true without trying to hurt someone.
  • Courage: Take the awkward good step instead of the easy mean one.
  • Patience: Give people time to understand and respond.
  • Inclusion: Notice who is being left out.
  • Repair: Try to make things better after harm or confusion.
Leader line: "Your values are the supports for the bridge. If the bridge does not match your values, it will not hold."
Part 2: Gap Rounds

Groups draw a gap card and choose bridge tools that fit the situation. They should not solve the whole problem. They should choose the next respectful step.

Each response should include:

  • Words: What could someone say?
  • Action: What could someone do?
  • Boundary: What should not happen?
Part 3: Paper Bridge Build

Groups make a simple paper bridge, chain, or pathway. Each bridge piece gets one tool or sentence.

The bridge must include:

  • One listening tool
  • One inclusion tool
  • One repair tool
  • One boundary or adult-help tool
Keep it simple: This is not an engineering challenge. No heavy objects, no pressure testing, no competition for the strongest bridge.
Part 4: Share-Out

Each group shares one safe example using this structure:

"Our gap was __________."

"The bridge tool we chose was __________."

"One sentence someone could say is __________."

"The respectful next step would be __________."

Executive-Function Supports

Use these supports for everyone. Do not make them look like accommodations for one camper.

Core principle: Make the social problem visible, concrete, predictable, and choice-limited. Do not make campers invent a full repair plan from scratch.
Limit choices first

Start with three gap cards, six bridge tool cards, and four bridge value cards. Keep extras nearby.

Counselor line: "Pick one: listen, invite, or apologize."

Use step cards
  1. 1
    Read the gap card.
  2. 2
    Choose the value that matters most.
  3. 3
    Pick two bridge tools.
  4. 4
    Write one sentence.
  5. 5
    Name one action.
  6. 6
    Add pieces to the bridge.
  7. 7
    Share one safe example.
Offer low-demand roles

Options: gap reader, tool picker, value picker, sentence writer, bridge designer, materials manager, speaker helper.

Counselor line: "You do not have to explain the whole thing. You can point to the tool you think fits."

Use Now / Next language
  • "Now: read the gap. Next: choose a tool."
  • "Now: write one sentence. Next: choose one action."
  • "Now: add the tool to the bridge. Next: choose what to share."
Coaching line for counselors: If a camper seems stuck, reduce the social choice to two options and ask for a point, vote, or card pick. Do not require a public explanation.

Bridge Card Menu

Use these as card options. Keep the starting pile small.

Bridge tool cards
  • Listen First

    Let someone explain before reacting.

  • Ask a Question

    Check what someone meant instead of guessing.

  • Invite In

    Make a clear opening for someone to join.

  • Apologize

    Name the harm and try to repair it.

  • Set a Boundary

    Be clear about what is not okay.

  • Ask for Help

    Bring in a counselor when the gap is too big.

Bridge value cards
  • Respect

    Treat people like they matter.

  • Honesty

    Say what is true without trying to hurt someone.

  • Courage

    Take the awkward good step.

  • Patience

    Give people time to understand and respond.

  • Inclusion

    Notice who is being left out.

  • Repair

    Try to make things better after harm or confusion.

Gap scenario cards
  • The Left-Out Camper

    One camper is nearby but never quite included in the group.

  • The Joke Lands Wrong

    A joke was meant to be funny, but someone got quiet afterward.

  • The Two Sides

    The group splits into sides after a disagreement.

  • The New Camper

    A new person wants to join but does not know how to step in.

  • The Loud Voice

    One person keeps talking over everyone else.

  • The Misunderstanding

    Two people heard the same comment in different ways.

Camper Role Cards

Make roles flexible: A camper may trade roles, share a role, or take a low-demand role. The role is support, not a test.

Redirect Scripts

A camper names real people

"Pause. No real names. Keep this at the scenario level."

Someone turns it into gossip

"That moved into gossip. Bring it back to the tool: what would help someone cross the gap respectfully?"

Someone says, "Just apologize and get over it"

"An apology can help, but repair is not forced. What action would make the apology more real?"

The group wants forced friendship

"A bridge is not forced friendship. Sometimes the respectful bridge is space, a boundary, or adult help."

One camper takes over

"Pause. I want one bridge tool from someone who has not spoken yet."

A camper is quiet

"You can point to the tool card you think fits."

The scenario feels too serious

"We do not have to solve every part. We are choosing the next respectful step."

Share-Out

"Our gap was __________."

"The bridge value that guided us was __________."

"The bridge tool we chose was __________."

"One respectful next step would be __________."

Debrief + Close

Use no more than three questions. Keep it short and grounded.

Closing line: "You do not have to fix every relationship. But you can choose a next step that protects respect, repair, and belonging."

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