Photo Gallery: Trinity’s Dream Camp Is Full of Summer Smiles
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Now in its 27th season, Trinity College’s Dream Camp—a summer camp and year-round academic mentoring program—provides a fun, educational, and safe environment for participating elementary school through high school students. Former Dream Campers and Trinity students serve as tutors and mentors throughout the academic year and as counselors during the summer session.
This year, Dream Camp received grants for general support from the Enterprise Holdings Foundation and the Stanley D. and Hinda N. Fisher Fund, as well as additional support for its Mentors in Training program from the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving.
Dream Campers decorated masks as an art project. See more photos by Nick Caito in the gallery below.
Among the chief goals of Trinity’s Dream Camp are to enhance out-of-school educational opportunities for Hartford’s children, build confidence and academic skills, and improve success in school—all of which help to build interest in pursuing higher education. As campers enter high school and begin considering options for college, Dream Camp’s programs focus more on issues such as college awareness, admissions, SAT prep, and navigating through college and financial aid applications.
During the summer program on Trinity’s campus, Dream Camp offers classes in creative and performing arts, health and nutrition, and fitness and athletics offerings. In the summer of 2023, 175 Hartford children ages 6 to 16 participated in the program. About 23 percent of Dream Camp staff members are former campers; their success in college and in the leadership role of counselor provides inspiration to young campers.
The Trinity College Writing Center recently received the 2025 Martinson Innovation Award from the Small Liberal Arts Colleges-Writing Program Administrators in recognition of the Center’s efforts to tutor incarcerated individuals.
In recognition of its strong institutional commitment to community engagement, Trinity College has received the prestigious 2026 Carnegie Elective Classification for Community Engagement.
A group of computer science majors are part of a pilot program from Trinity’s Entrepreneurship Center that, together with business and community partners, is developing new uses for artificial intelligence.
The team that created “Voices of Keney Park”—an initiative that began as a Public Humanities Collaborative (PHC) project at Trinity College—has received the 2025 President’s Award from the Olmsted Network, in recognition of its community leadership.