Parents of four- and five-year-olds face a particular challenge when evaluating summer camp options: most programs describe themselves in ways that sound appropriate for young children without providing the structural specifics that actually matter. A lower ratio matters more than a longer activity list. A clear drop-off routine matters more than a promotional video. For very young children, the difference between a good fit and a rough summer often comes down to whether the program was designed with their developmental stage in mind or simply extended to include them.
These eight signs help you move past the marketing and identify camps that have genuinely done the work.
Staff-to-camper ratio is the single most concrete measure of whether a program can support young children through a full day. According to the American Camp Association's guidance on camp safety, accredited day camps should staff one adult for every six children ages 4 and 5, the tightest ratio required at any age level. If a camp's ratio for your child's age group is listed as 1:8, 1:10, or simply "varies by activity," that's a meaningful gap.
A good camp for very young children will:
At DEAN Adventure Camps, the counselor-to-camper ratio is 1:7 across all age groups, including the Discoverers program for Pre-K and kindergartners. Every Lead Counselor holds current First Aid and CPR certification.
Young children thrive with consistency, and a camp that folds Pre-K kids into the same program flow as third-graders is setting everyone up for a harder day. Watch for whether a camp differentiates by age tier, not just by activity.
Signs that a program has built age-specific structure:
DEAN's Discoverers program for Pre-K and kindergarten is designed specifically for this age: activities are hands-on and tactile, transitions are managed by counselors who know each child by name, and the day is structured to match how young children actually move through energy and attention.
The start of the day is one of the highest-stakes moments for very young children. The AAP notes on HealthyChildren.org that transitions are harder for young children when they are hungry, tired, or when the goodbye process is unpredictable, which means a camp's approach to drop-off is a functional signal about its approach to everything else.
A well-designed drop-off for young children should include:
Camps that leave drop-off unstructured, or that describe it only in logistical terms like parking and timing without addressing the emotional transition, are often underprepared for the specific needs of four- and five-year-olds.
Young children learn by doing. A program filled with videos, lectures, or large-group observation doesn't fit how Pre-K and kindergarten-age kids actually engage. Look for programs built around making, moving, and exploring rather than watching or waiting.
Good summer camp options for this age group feature activities where the child is the one doing the work: shaping clay, building with wood scraps, mixing ingredients, planting seeds, playing outside. The output of the day should be something a child can point to or describe because they made it themselves.
At DEAN, the philosophy is make something real — every program, from Culinary Arts to Woodworking to Outdoor Adventure, is structured around campers producing something tangible. That approach is especially well-suited to young children, who build confidence through concrete, visible results.
A full day of camp is a long time for a five-year-old. Hunger and blood sugar management affect behavior, attention, and emotional regulation more than most parents expect. A camp that sends young children home for lunch, relies entirely on packed food, or schedules meals at adult-paced intervals isn't accounting for how young children actually eat.
Look for camps that:
DEAN provides a hot breakfast, full lunch, and multiple snacks daily as part of flat-rate, all-inclusive pricing. No add-on, no packed lunch required. Longer days. Lunch included. Less to think about.
NAEYC's program standards for high-quality early childhood care emphasize that curriculum should include planned activities, daily schedules, and routines that help children develop skills through exploration and play. A predictable schedule isn't just an administrative convenience; it's a developmental tool. Young children regulate more easily when they know what comes next.
Before enrolling in any program, ask whether you can see a sample daily schedule. If a camp can't produce one, or offers only a vague sequence like "morning activities, then lunch, then afternoon fun," that's a gap worth taking seriously. The best summer camp options for young children can tell you, specifically, how a four-year-old's Tuesday afternoon is structured from 1:00 to 3:00 PM.
This one matters more than it sounds. A program that ends at noon or 2:00 PM is not a full-day solution for working families, and for young children, stitching together a camp and a babysitter adds transitions that are genuinely hard on this age group. Consistency of place and people matters for little ones.
Look for camps that cover the hours you actually need. Programs running from 7:30 AM to 5:30 PM with no additional fee for early drop-off or late pickup remove a daily logistical stress and give young children a stable, familiar environment for the full day. Structure for them. Simplicity for you.
DEAN's coverage runs from 7:30 AM to 5:30 PM, all included in a single flat rate, at both the Haverford College and Lawrenceville School locations.
This sounds like a soft criterion. It isn't. Whether staff actually know individual children, their preferences, their challenges, their names, is one of the most reliable signals that a program operates at a ratio, pace, and intentionality level suited to young children. A counselor managing twenty kids cannot know each one; a counselor managing six can.
You can assess this in a few ways:
DEAN's operating philosophy is the camp that notices. Every counselor knows your child's name. That's a design principle, not a tagline.
If you're comparing summer camp options for a Pre-K or kindergarten-age child, the Discoverers program at DEAN Adventure Camps is built specifically for this age. The 1:7 counselor ratio, all-inclusive pricing, predictable daily structure, and hands-on program design are all in place from day one.
If you're still working through whether your child is ready for a full-day program, this guide to choosing a first day camp for preschoolers covers the readiness questions worth asking before you register.
DEAN operates at Haverford College on the Main Line and at The Lawrenceville School near Princeton. Both locations follow the same program structure, ratio standards, and daily schedule for the youngest campers.