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Summer camp registration opens for grades 6-9

Community
February 13, 2026 By Lenore Friend

Students can get experience with facilities and equipment typically available to college students.

Three students wearing eye protection stand around a lab table as a fourth student uses instruments
FLCC summer camps offer a wide range of hands-on experiences, depending on students' interests.

FLCC will host week-long camps this summer for students who will enter grades 6 through 9 in fall 2026.

Camps will be held at the campus centers in Geneva, Newark and Victor and the Muller Field Station at the south end of Honeoye Lake.

Called STEAM campus, each has science, technology, engineering, art and math elements. 

Camps run from 8:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. and cost $250. Costs include camp supplies, snacks and a souvenir. Campers bring their own lunch. Students may attend more than one camp. 

A limited number of scholarships will be available, based on household income. For questions, email steam.camp@flcc.edu.

Register now

Dates and themes are as follows:

July 6-10, STEAM in Motion, Victor Campus Center, off Route 251

Students will build things that roll, glide, propel, and fly. They will explore how mechanical parts, electronic circuits, and robotics can be used to create motion. Entertaining science demonstrations and educational games will also be a part of the camp experience. 

July 13-17, STEAM in Orbit: Ready to Launch, Newark Campus Center, off Route 88

Campers will explore computer science and game design. They will learn about technology and skilled trade careers through interactive tools such as virtual welding simulations. Students will also learn about careers related to the Artemis mission to return humans to the moon. Students will design, test, and launch pop-bottle rockets, applying physics concepts like force, motion, and trajectory.

July 20-24, STEAM in Nature, Muller Field Station, County Road 36, Canadice

Through outdoor experiences, students will learn about the cycles of the environment and participate in plant and wildlife identification games. They will go canoeing to observe animal activity along the channel trail at the south end of Honeoye Lake and take part in water quality and watershed building activities. Campers will learn how Muller Field Station projects support the environment and how they can give back to the environment in their own backyards. 

July 27-31, STEAM Detectives, Geneva Campus Center, 63 Pulteney St.

The camp introduces students to the world of clues, codes, and related science. Campers explore CSI techniques like fingerprinting, DNA analysis, and forensic sketching. They’ll also crack outdoor mysteries through geocaching and use science, technology, engineering, art, and math to uncover the truth.