The Camp Visual Support System

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Camp is supposed to be the best week of a kid's summer. For neurodivergent campers, it can also be the most overwhelming. The Camp Ready Resource Pack gives your team a complete visual support system — built for the real rhythm of camp life, not a generic template with 'camp' in the title.

Supporting neurodivergent campers well isn't one tool — it's a system. The Camp Ready Resource Pack gives your team everything they need to bring visual structure to the full camp day, from morning routine to cleanup to hard moments in between.

Three editable HTML tools. One cohesive support system. Built specifically for camp.

What's included:

  • My Way Visual Schedule — 5 tabbed schedules covering Morning at Camp, Afternoon Activities, Evening Wind-Down, Before You Go Activity Checklist, and Bathroom Routine. Includes a faith-based activity idea bank with options like Chapel, Small Groups, and Prayer Time.
  • My Way Choice Board — 7 tabbed boards including Free Time, Rainy Day Choices, Help Me Reset, and the Leader Choice board — a counselor-facing tool for guiding campers through hard moments together.
  • My Way Cleaning Checklist — 12 tabbed checklists covering every space at camp, from Cabin Tidy to Kitchen Close-Down to End of Day Walkthrough. Camper-facing and staff-facing tabs included.

Every tool includes:

  • Fully editable: rename, reorder, add, or remove any step
  • Built-in emoji or upload your own photos
  • Print full-page or half-page
  • Reorder with arrows (great on mobile) or drag and drop (works best on desktop)
  • No apps, no subscriptions, no software — just open in any browser and go

Who it's for:

  • Camp directors building inclusion support systems
  • Counselors supporting neurodivergent or special needs campers
  • Inclusion coordinators and special needs program leads
  • Faith-based camps that want visual tools that reflect their values

Save $10 when you buy the full pack.

Ability Oasis is built on 25 years of experience supporting neurodivergent children across family, education, and camp settings — and the perspective of a neurodivergent parent who gets it. # See more Illustrations: