How can we create a culture of care and with less harm?
For more than a decade, we have researched problems and developed programs to benefit schools. As a result, we now know how to develop leaders who promote care and prevent harm to change culture.
Promoting care is aspirational — increasing kindness, creating psychological safety, and enhancing well-being. Preventing harm is stopping problems or mitigating harmful outcomes. Put together, the goals and strategies are to "Promote Care & Prevent Harm". This integrative approach is reflected by the “&” in our new logo.
We can prevent harm: the spread of the coronavirus, mental illness,
violence, and loneliness. We can also promote care: health, mental wellness, peace, and connection.
About
Our journey began with Virginia Tech students after the April 16, 2007 school shooting. Our story is not defined by this traumatic event, but rather by the moments of resilience that followed and the commitment of student leaders to build a better culture.
Our youth-led movement has evolved from care during community recovery into a non-profit organization, which focuses on translating research into programs for youth to build safer, healthier, and more connected school communities.
Our Story
After the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting, we began a search for
the answers to the most challenging questions…
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What are the roles of bystanders?
In 2022, we examined the role of bystanders, expanding the paradigm from an exclusive focus on prevention-oriented upstanding toward a focus on promotion-oriented upstanding. We wrote two preprints (on a conceptual model and the design of bystander programs) and published a manuscript evaluating the upstanding for promotion-prevention (UPP) program.
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Does structural thinking matter?
In 2023, we published a manuscript on how to facilitate a moral reckoning on structural racism. We explain how two forms of structural thinking — structural competency and critical consciousness — could contribute to efforts that address the sociostructural determinants of health and racism.
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Do mindsets matter?
In 2024, we are examining the way promotion and prevention mindsets influence prosocial goals and mental health promotion and mental distress prevention strategies among high school and college students.