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Putting Power Tools In The Hands Of 5-Year-Olds

Photo 4127 is a few kids/ Construction Kids
Beth Fertig/WNYC
Photo 4127 is a few kids/ Construction Kids

Photo 4131 shows Deb Winsor, founder of Construction Kids, with some of the campers including Penelope Day (on right in white shirt with flower).
Beth Fertig/WNYC
Photo 4131 shows Deb Winsor, founder of Construction Kids, with some of the campers including Penelope Day (on right in white shirt with flower).

Seven-year-old Penelope Day needs both hands to pick up the power drill.

"Go ahead, turn it on," says Deb Windsor, who's working with Penelope on this project. "You might want to make it go faster."

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As she does, Penelope feels the rush of air from the motor. "The wind is blowing right on you" she says. "You can feel the vibration of the drill bit going in."

Penelope is spending the week at a day camp run by Construction Kids. The Brooklyn-based program offers building classes throughout the year for kids as young as 2 years old. It's one a new and immensely popular wave of programs trying to shift kids away from computer screens toward actual, hands-on activities. Like building things from scratch.

With help from a team of adults, the children in this program will design and make their own game boards, foosball tables and models of cities, even the Brooklyn Bridge.

Windsor began Construction Kids five years ago. She's a wood worker who came up with the idea after giving a lesson on building to her 4-year-old son's pre-K class.

Last year alone, she says, 12,000 kids signed up. Windsor thinks these programs offer an antidote to all the time kids spend on their screens.

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"There's just an incredible demand on the part of parents to have their kids do this kind of learning," she says. "The schools can't do it for a lot of reasons. It's expensive, they don't have the insurance that covers it. It's a big step to train your teachers."

Not to mention the fear of putting power tools in the hands of 5-year-olds. Windsor says her biggest obstacle was finding an insurance company. But she says her staffers keep a very watchful eye and there haven't been any serious injuries. "Sometimes we have splinters. Every now and then someone will, you know, hit their finger.

Windsor says the program is so popular she's creating a nonprofit foundation to serve more public schools that can't otherwise afford it.

Educators say building is an important way for kids to learn by doing — just look at the enduring popularity of blocks and Lego.

Eric Bogner says his 6-year-old son, Skyler, is loving this camp.

"I think it's extremely important to build with your hands and really embrace craft," Bogner says. "And feel like you can build things and construct what's in your mind, rather than trying to search for it on the computer.

At Construction Kids, there's a lot of excitement about the first big project of the week. It's a gigantic marble run, 18 feet of wooden ramps leading to a maze made out of nails. But the staff members have to hold up the planks in order to keep it working.

Seven-year-old Max Rhodes thinks he has a solution.

"We need to build stilts all the way down to the ground," Max says. "But if we work all together, this might take, at least three days, not the whole week."

For a lot of parents, that's a good use of time. Copyright 2014 WNYC Radio. To see more, visit http://www.wnyc.org/.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/