OUR APPROACH
For Children and Families:
The Wunderbolt team recognizes that with many summer camps and activities being delayed and even canceled this summer, kids are craving opportunities to connect with others and have fun! We also know that parents and caregivers are balancing the new roles they are playing for their children with all of their other obligations during this tumultuous time. That’s why our team created Wunderbolt which aims to fill these gaps during the summer months!
By enrolling your child in Wunderbolt, they can look forward to:
- Personalized, independent, and most-importantly fun enrichment activities and projects.
- Individualized support and regular connections with a trained coach.
- Regular opportunities for social connections with other participating kids.
Wunderbolt aims to minimize the burden on children’s parents and caregivers by providing children with curated activities, projects, and challenges along with the materials and support they will need to complete them, whether physical or digital. We also provide parents and caregivers with visibility into all aspects of children’s interactions with coaches and each other. The Wunderbolt activities and projects will be both motivated by your child’s interests and will be directly supported by the coach.
For Coaches:
The Wunderbolt team is in awe of the amazing generosity and motivation we’ve seen in our communities in direct response to the pandemic. We know that there are many people out there looking to volunteer their time and resources to help others during this time of instability. Through coaching, we hope to provide volunteers with a new and different way to get involved that is low burden, yet high impact!
Commitment and Supports: We will host a 2-hour virtual training for coaches (dates of training options are 7/30 and 8/3) to prepare them for Session 2. The Wunderbolt team will closely support coaches throughout the four-week session. On average, coaches spend 3 hours per week coaching one child.
OUR TEAM
Wunderbolt was conceived of in the Lab for Social Machines (LSM) at the MIT Media Lab in spring 2020 when a group of graduate students, staff, and faculty came together to try to tackle some of the new educational challenges surfaced by the COVID-19 pandemic. The program builds on years of Social Machines research focused on creating connected learning opportunities and building systems to scaffold children’s playful, open-ended learning, including with the support of coaches.