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.

Be sure to join our email list and connect with us on Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram, to stay current with Making Caring Common’s news and updates. If you’re a member of the media, please visit our Media Room.


Posts in News
The Santa Fe New Mexican: Model a Moral Code of Conduct for Your Children

This article mentions one of our studies which found that 80 percent of youths valued achievement and happiness over concern for others.

“And it is this prioritizing of personal success over kindness that leads to negative behavior. As parents, we say we want well-behaved kids, but this study points to what it calls a rhetoric/reality gap,” Bizia Greene writes in the Santa Fe New Mexican.

She discusses some Making Caring Common strategies to help us all have kindness in common.

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Tests and the Rest: The Making Caring Common Project

The premise of holistic admissions suggests that admissions officers consider the whole applicant. But how can intangibles like character or compassion be judged alongside empirical data like grades or test scores?

Amy and Mike from Tests and the rest invited Glenn Manning and Brennan E. Barnard to describe how this challenge is being addressed by the Making Caring Common Project.

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HGSE Usable Knowledge: Making Space for Difficult Discussions

Let children lead conversations about traumatic events, says Richard Weissbourd, faculty director of Making Caring Common.

“Find out what their concerns are, make room for their questions, and know how they’re processing and making meaning out of the events first.” Rick spoke with Emily Boudreau for this piece that provides guidance for educators and families to support productive conversations.

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The Spokesman-Review: What Should Count in College Admissions: The Quality of Future Leaders We Most Need

“We may be failing to help our teens develop the critical cognitive, social and ethical capacities that are at the heart of both doing good and doing well in college and beyond,” said Making Caring Common director Richard Weissbourd. Our college admissions work was mentioned in this Spokesman - Review article.

In June of 2020, more than 300 admissions deans spoke out to encourage college applicants to be honest about the obstacles they have faced during the pandemic, as well as meaningful activities they've undertaken, such as caring for siblings, shopping for elderly neighbors, and writing thank-you notes to essential workers.

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USA Today: Dads Took on More Childcare When They Worked From Home During COVID-19. Will a Vaccine End That?

“My guess is that at least some dads, because they have found real and deep gratification in their relationships with their kids during this time, will work hard to preserve this closeness," expressed Rick Weissbourd in USA Today.

This article mentions our research study that found a majority of fathers felt closer to their children during the pandemic.

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NewsAli CashinCOVID, Parenting
The Wall Street Journal: How We Can Reconcile With Each Other When Our Politics Are So Polarized

While this year has shed light on how politically divided Americans are, our new research brief shows that the majority of Americans are willing to make amends across the aisle. 83% percent of the 1,400 respondents surveyed earlier this year said they could respect someone who disagrees with them politically as long as the person respected them back. Emily Bernstein includes some of our insights in this Wall Street Journal article.

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Good Housekeeping : 4 Tips for Applying to College During the Coronavirus Pandemic

In June, more than 300 admissions deans spoke out to encourage college applicants to be honest about the obstacles they have faced during the pandemic, as well as meaningful activities they've undertaken, such as caring for siblings, shopping for elderly neighbors, and writing thank-you notes to essential workers.

Read more about our collaboration with the deans in Good Housekeeping Magazine.

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National Geographic: The Latest Health Kick for Kids: Kindness

"Kindness is what gets our families healthy, our country healthy. It's how we live together so we’re constructive and joyful. If we don’t take care of each other, we won’t survive.” - Rick Weissbourd, Making Caring Common Faculty Director.

National Geographic’s Jamie Kiffel Alcheh emphasizes the benefits of kindness for kids’ health and gives some tips on how to teach kindness and kind things that kids can do.

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NewsAli CashinParenting, COVID
PACH: An Interview With Richard Weissbourd

While this year has shed light on how politically divided Americans are, our new research brief shows that the majority of Americans are willing to make amends across the aisle. 83% percent of the 1,400 respondents surveyed earlier this year said they could respect someone who disagrees with them politically as long as the person respected them back. Emily Bernstein includes some of our insights in this Wall Street Journal article.

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Be Latina: How to Convince Your Stubborn Friend or Family Member to Vote

Our Get Out the Vote program was highlighted in the Be Latina article: How to Convince Your Stubborn Friend or Family Member to Vote.Journalist Erica Nahmad spoke with Making Caring Common faculty director, Rick Weissbourd who emphasized the challenges o getting college - aged voters to the polls.

Rick reiterates this point, claiming that “only 40% of college students turned out in the 2018 midterm election — a dramatic jump from the 19% student turnout in the 2014 midterm elections, but a disappointing percentage for any healthy democracy.”

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