All Family
- Letter from ‘Glasto’: Kid packs, wilderness wipes, and ‘Rocket Man’
The Glastonbury music festival turns a patch of English pasture into one of the happiest places on Earth. The challenge: how to participate, in comfort, with a 2-year-old son and pregnant wife.
- “A giving spirit”: Getting children in foster care through the pandemic
The pandemic makes it harder to serve youth in the foster care system, but it has also sparked creative workarounds within programs and communities.
- Bucking predictions, some couples are bonding not breaking during pandemic
For some Americans, pandemic confinement has led to breakups. But for others, like those spotlighted here, it marks a deepening commitment.
- FocusMultigenerational households confirm: The more the merrier
Multigenerational households have been on the rise since the 1980s. Families value the practical advantages and the closeness across generations.
- Focus‘We’re not projects’: Transracial adoptees insist on being seen
Rejecting extreme portrayals of their families and lives, transracial adoptees navigate nuance and urge parents to advocate against racism.
- After the pandemic, where will the US child care system end up?
Improving the child care system in the U.S. increasingly includes discussion about how to offer learning opportunities to children sooner.
- Defying expectations: Monitor readers share women who inspired them
We asked readers to share stories of women in their lives who challenged the status quo and rose above what society said was possible for women.
- ‘I can’t keep this up much longer’: Parents struggle with pandemic strain
After months of trying to do it all, many parents are considering other child care options, tapping into networks, and asking for flexibility at work.
- Another effect of the coronavirus crisis: Forgiveness
For some people, this has become a time to forgive and reconcile with estranged family members.
- Isolated from peers, teens find new paths to community amid pandemic
Teens’ lives have been turned upside down by the coronavirus lockdown just as they are seeking autonomy and creating their own identity.
- Alexander Hamilton: statesman, dueler, birthday party theme
Projected to earn $1 billion and earning Tony-Award glory, 'Hamilton' the musical is still going strong in backyards and classrooms across the country.
- When it comes to 'sharenting,' new parents are divided over online footprints
Pop singer Beyoncé's recent choice to share a photo of her twin babies on Instagram highlights a debate among parents who were raised on digital media about how much to reveal about their children online.
- Grandparents find new – and longer – life in caring for grandkids
Researchers in Berlin have found that grandparents who take part in raising their grandchildren live longer than those who do not.
- First LookBoosting the prospects of foster children: Ohio ups the age limit
Foster children, often having suffered trauma at a young age, frequently lose their support system when they turn 18. Ohio, in part of a growing trend, has extended its foster care services up to the age of 21.
- Orlando attack: How to talk to kids about terrorism
Parents and teachers can help young people deal with terrorism or national tragedies by starting a conversation – and helping them find ways to help others.
- First LookAbandoned as punishment? Japanese boy's disappearance sparks questions.
The disappearance, and eventual safe return, of a young Japanese boy prompted a national conversation in Japan over parental discipline and childrearing.
- Why my children demanded to attend a Bernie Sanders rally
This Norfolk, Va., mom couldn't get her children to go to any political rally – until Bernie Sanders came to town.
- Mom of triplets thanks Delta Air Lines: A victory for breastfeeding?
A mother of triplets thanks Delta Air Lines for accommodating her breastfeeding needs. Is this a sign of a societal shift toward nursing mothers?
- First LookFDA looks to crack down on teens use of tanning salons
The agency proposes new regulations to restrict a popular activity that it says is harmful to public health.
- First LookFewer US teens are experimenting with hard drugs
Use of MDMA, heroin, and amphetamines by junior and high school students dropped in 2015, following a longterm pattern of decline.