Raising kids who care about others and the common good.
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Read the latest from Making Caring Common! You’re in the right place for our media coverage, general updates, and press releases. Topics include: Access and Equity, Bias, Bullying, Caring and Empathy, College Admissions, Gender, MCC Update, Misogyny and Sexual Harassment, Moral and Ethical Development, Parenting, Romantic Relationships, School Culture, Trauma, and Youth Advisory Board.

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Read the latest from Making Caring Common!

You’re in the right place for our media coverage, blog posts, and event information. Our work spans a range of topics, all connected by our commitment to elevate caring and concern for the common good at school, at home, and in our communities. You can review what’s new below or use the dropdowns to sort by topic and category.

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Posts in All What's New
Psych Central: How to Avoid Losing Friends Over Politics

The political divide in the United States has been growing steadily for years. Psych Central argues that, although we’re more polarized than we’ve been in modern history, it’s still possible to have productive conversations about political beliefs. They quote MCC’s Richard Weissbourg, who argues that dfference and disagreement are healthy and necessary for a thriving democracy.

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Psychology Today: Come as You Are | Our Integrity is What the World is Waiting For

As devastating as the pandemic has been, it has also exposed wide holes in our social fabric. We're in an epidemic of loneliness, exacerbated by decades of a competition-based mindset and innate need to "prove" our worthiness, writes Chris Prange-Morgan in Psychology Today, However, she writes that we can learn from one another’s struggles as well as grow from helping one another and accepting help. Furthermore, studies show we might be ripe for collective change.

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Robert Roy Britt via Medium: Lonely? So Many Are. Here’s What to Do.

Modern society has torn us apart in many ways. Grown kids scatter across the country and around the globe. More people live alone than ever before. Polarized ideology divides family and friends. And perhaps most insidious, social media spotlights supposedly idyllic lives that can make our own existence seem isolated and pathetic. The result: We’re growing more and more lonely. And it’s killing us, figuratively and literally.

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L.A. Times: How to Give Kids Stability During this Unpredictable Roller Coaster of a Pandemic

Though we’re in a better spot than we were a year ago, with a vaccine that shields most of us from severe COVID-19 symptoms and with kids back in school, this latest surge caused by the Omicron variant feels reminiscent in many ways to the darkest seasons of the pandemic. The good news is that parents can be a stabilizing force in their kids’ lives during this era of unpredictability

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Christian Post: 31% of Americans experience loneliness daily; 1 in 5 practicing Christians say the same

“‘We have big holes in our social fabric,’ said the report’s lead author and Making Caring Common faculty director Richard Weissbourd, a senior lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and the Harvard Kennedy School. ‘We need to mobilize coherently and strategically to assure that far fewer Americans are stranded and disconnected.’”

A new study that examines rates of loneliness across the U.S. and within the Christian church found that three in 10 U.S. adults experience loneliness at least once daily. Read more in this Christian Post piece.

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The Washington Post: How To Cope With Loneliness

“‘Covid made more people lonely and made lonely people lonelier,’ Harvard psychologist Richard Weissbourd says. He blames increased social isolation and pandemic-related anxiety, grief and depression, which often fuel each other.’

Read more about the prevalence of loneliness in our culture and steps to address it in this Washington Post piece by Steven Petrow.

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Forbes: Handling College Admission Decisions: A Sidecar Parent’s Guide

“Parents need to ask themselves how much of their own hopes and needs are getting confused with what is best for their child—their own status concerns, their competitive feelings with other parents, their belief that the college their child attends is a clear and public reflection of their success as parents, their hopes that their child will live out their particular dreams or compensate for their shortcomings.”

Read more sound, sane advice for families as college admissions decisions start rolling in in this Forbes piece by Brennan Barnard.

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Business Insider: One chart shows how the pandemic made Americans reevaluate what's most meaningful to them. It's not romance.

When it comes to relationships, a new Pew survey suggests that family and children are more meaningful to Americans than romantic partners.

Read more in this Business Insider piece, which also cites MCC’s 2020 report on fathers feeling closer to their children since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Usable Knowledge: Gratitude Is More Than Just Saying Thank You

Gratitude is about more than saying “thank you.” If we want to help kids truly develop gratitude, adults need to go a step further — they need to teach kids to notice (who or what we’re grateful for) and think (about why we’re grateful), on a regular basis.

Read more about Making Caring Common’s strategies for developing gratitude in children in this Usable Knowledge piece.

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The New York Times: Happy Children Do Chores

In this article in The New York Times, Making Caring Common’s research on the power and frequency of parents’ messages about achievement and happiness is cited. Although household chores seem like a small thing, the subtle but pervasive message of requiring them isn’t small at all. Requiring a high schooler to contribute to the family well-being and the smooth running of the household before turning his attention to his books conveys the value you place on that contribution.

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