Timely reads from the MCC team for the week of November 14, 2022.
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In partnership with the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), the Los Angeles Rams hosted a school-wide pep rally for Third Street Elementary School students to kick off Making Caring Common’s Caring Schools Network program.
Read MoreTimely reads from the MCC team for the week of November 7, 2022.
Read MoreMaking Caring Common first published Turning the Tide (TTT) almost seven years ago. Trisha Ross Anderson, MCC’s College Admissions Program Director, shares an update about how our college admissions work has grown since this groundbreaking report.
Read MoreIn this Psychology Today piece, clinical psychologist Jennifer Guttman cites our 2021 report on the state of caring in America and shares four tips for treating ourselves and others with more compassion.
Read MoreErica Pandey cites MCC’s report about loneliness in America in this Axios Finish Line piece highlighting statistics about loneliness in the United States.
Read MoreNBC Los Angeles report on how LAUSD’s 3rd Street Elementary school is using our Caring Schools Network program to help kids care, connect, and feel a greater sense of belonging at school.
Read MoreMaking Caring Common’s new Educator Advisory Board represents a diverse group of school leaders, content experts, practitioners, and others in the field of education who will help guide our work with K-12 schools.
Read MoreThe Journal’s editorial staff cites MCC’s report on loneliness in this piece that examines the science suggesting that lonely people are less likely to vote.
Read MoreLos Angeles’ KTLA reports from LAUSD’s Third Street Elementary School, which is piloting MCC’s Caring Schools Network program.
Read MoreThe Clayton Christiansen Institute’s Julia Freedland Fisher argues that schools miss the big picture when they don’t include relationship data in their data-gathering efforts. Read more in her piece in EdSurge.
Read MoreWant your kids to value their community service? Ask them questions that get them reflecting about what they learned. Check out these suggestions from MCC's faculty director, Rick Weissbourd in HGSE’s Usable Knowledge.
Read MoreIn this piece for Forbes, Brennan Barnard urges families to dig deeper than acceptance rates in their college search process.
Read MoreKids might feel that the world is spinning out of control after the Uvalde, Texas shooting, MCC’s Rick Weissbourd tells the Los Angeles Times. Parents can support them by helping them turn "passivity into activity."
Read MoreGenesis Rivas cites MCC research in this Shape magazine piece that takes a look at definitions of loneliness, some causes of loneliness, and tips for managing it.
Read More“I used to text my wife on the train ride home, asking how everyone’s day was. Now I am part of that day. And I love that.”
MCC research suggests that many fathers, like the dad quoted above, have felt closer to their kids since the pandemic began. In this Slate piece, Brigid Schulte and Kate Mangino take a closer look at how future opportunities to balance work and childcare will largely be shaped by men.
Read MoreWhy does it feel so hard to care right now? TIME’s Lily Rothman speaks with MCC’s Rick Weissbourd about “the harder forms of caring” and how race and class have informed people’s experiences of loneliness over the last two years.
Read MoreHow did the pandemic impact students’ admissions and college choice process and experiences? Melissa Ezarik spoke with MCC’s Rick Weissbourd for this piece in Inside Higher Ed.
Read MoreUnbound interviewed MCC’s Milena Batanova about the valuable “soft skill” of empathy in the workplace.
Says Batanova: To “truly empathize, to listen and be present and to think about improving others’ lives…that can go a long way in any profession, and there’s nothing simple or soft about it.”
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