Kids Camps and Youth Programs at Loyola University Maryland

Loyola University Maryland, 4501 N Charles St, Baltimore, MD 21210

mapLoyola University Maryland, 4501 N Charles St, Baltimore, MD 21210

About

Kids Camps and Youth Programs at Loyola University Maryland include hands-on activities such as experiments, science games, coding, game design, and projects that draw on each child’s artistic side. Participants can also work on soccer skills, public speaking, writing, recording, editing, team building, social media, podcasting, entrepreneurship, and creating sports talk radio shows, sports debate shows, sports anchor videos, and sideline reporting videos. Additional options include a youth climbing clinic with climbing stations, challenging routes, and at least one boulder problem, as well as a Reading and Writing Skills program that focuses on reading skills and writing skills.

• Ages: 4–18 years old

Science Guys Summer Camp Programs are available for kids 5–12 and are described as a mix of fun and education called “edutainment.” Brains & Motion camps are held at Loyola University Maryland, and the Play By Play Sports program is for children aged 10–18 to learn about the sports broadcasting industry. The Summer Reading Program offers a Reading and Writing Skills program for 4-year-olds through adults. Women in Sports Day celebrates the achievements of female Greyhound athletes and includes activities, engagement, and a women’s basketball game, and the Youth Climbing Clinic is capped at 10 climbers total to maintain an ideal facilitator to student ratio. Loyola’s campus is a certified level II arboretum.

Loyola University Maryland was founded in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1852 by the Society of Jesus. The university states that it is a Jesuit, Catholic institution committed to the educational and spiritual traditions of the Society of Jesus and the development of the whole person, and that it inspires students to learn, lead, and serve in a diverse and changing world. The leadership team connected to the institution includes David Tiscione, Director of Title IX and Bias Compliance; Rodney Parker, Chief Equity and Inclusion Officer; Rita Buettner, Director, University Communications; and Liam Davis, Assistant Director, University Communications. Loyola reports that it is anchored in and committed to its surrounding community and offers diverse programming for Baltimore youth. The university reports being in the top 2% in the nation for long-term return on investment out of 4,500 universities, that 99% of Greyhounds are employed, enrolled in professional or graduate school, or completing full-time service within six months of receiving their diplomas, and that it ranks in the top 7% nationally for mid-career salary potential of alumni. One student, Amber, ’22, an English/Communication Interdisciplinary Major with a Writing Minor, states that she has made lifelong friendships and relationships at Loyola and that the university and the people there have helped shape who she is now.

Last updated January 23, 2026.

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