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Richard Weissbourd is a senior lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. His work focuses on moral development, the nature of hope, vulnerability and resilience in childhood, parenting and effective schools and services for children. He directs the Making Caring Common Project, a national effort to make moral and social development priorities in child-raising and to provide strategies to schools and parents for promoting in children caring, a commitment to justice and other key moral and social capacities. He leads an initiative to reform college admissions, Turning the Tide, which has engaged over 300 college admissions offices. This initiative seeks to elevate ethical character, reduce excessive achievement pressure and increase equity and access in the college admissions process. He is also conducting research on how older adults can better mentor young adults and teenagers in developing caring, ethical, and mature romantic relationships.
He is a founder of several interventions for children facing risks, including ReadBoston and WriteBoston, city-wide literacy initiatives led by Mayor Menino. He is also a founder of a pilot school in Boston, the Lee Academy, that begins with children at 3 years old. He has advised on the city, state and federal levels on family policy, parenting and school reform and has written for numerous scholarly and popular publications and blogs, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, Psychology Today and NPR. He is the author of The Vulnerable Child: What Really Hurts America’s Children and What We Can Do About It (Addison-Wesley, 1996), named by the American School Board Journal as one of the top 10 education books of all time. His most recent book, The Parents We Mean to Be: How Well-Intentioned Adults Undermine Children's Moral and Emotional Development (Houghton Mifflin 2009), was named by The New Yorker as one of the top 24 books of 2009.
Imagine a world where kindness and empathy are the cornerstones of young peoples everyday lives. Making Caring Commons vision for The Choose Kindness Project and Alliance (TCKP) is to make powerful strides toward this reality through a four-pronged strategy: 1) Expanding the reach and impact of TCKP resources; 2) Engaging new audiences, particularly in underserved communities; 3) Creating a lab that enables Alliance members to strengthen their research and evaluation efforts, share findings, and continuously improve; and 4) Outlining a plan for lasting impact.
Making Caring Common (along with collaborators Welcoming America and StoryCorps, seeking separate grant funding) seeks to expand and deepen our efforts to cultivate middle and high school students capacity to care across difference and to pursue justice. Together, we will make our resources and strategies more culturally relevant and accessible to more families, students and educators from a diverse range of communities and support schools in deeper and more sustained work that is far more likely to cultivate these capacities in students. By drawing on each other's unique strengths and collaborating in innovative ways, we anticipate having far deeper impact and achieving goals we could not achieve alone
Study shows that online resources can help parents guide their child’s character strengths
Researchers share what Americans have to say about social disconnection and potential solutions
Three HGSE faculty members share actionable steps and words of wisdom for supporting young people amid uncertain times
Making Caring Common identifies several drivers of young adults’ emotional challenges, including a lack of meaning and purpose