The science of love ❤️

👋 “Love fuels learning,” as Isabelle Hau says in her powerful new book, Love to Learn: The Transformative Power of Care and Connection in Early Education.

I know this firsthand because a rare health condition kept me out of recess during kindergarten. Instead I spent extra time with my teacher — reading, talking, and forming a close bond.

Now I realize how that time together gave me the confidence to question, explore, and grow. The connection between love and learning was shaping me before I even had words for it.

Love to Learn reinforces what science has shown for decades: For babies and young children, loving relationships are as essential to health and happiness as food and shelter, and critical for cognitive development.

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Fighting for families 👪

👋 The hatred and anger that often dominate discourse these days erode people’s belief in the possibility of progress. It’s easy to feel discouraged when high-decibel conflict drowns out the voice of cooperation.

But dedicated community activists, advocates, and local policymakers are persistently working together across the country to increase economic security and improve families’ health and well-being. We see the power of change in such efforts as expanding paid leave to care for loved ones, making quality child care more available and more affordable, and launching life-saving maternal health initiatives for every new mom.

Shared values drive this progress: the belief that every child has the right to grow up healthy, happy, and well cared for.

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Meet Burke’s 2024 Community Champions ⭐

2024 Burke Foundation Community Champions

👋 Happy Holidays!

“When a child walks in the room, your child or anybody else’s child, do your eyes light up? That’s what they’re looking for.” – Toni Morrison

That powerful reminder speaks to the heart of the Burke Foundation’s mission to help make sure every child feels seen, valued, and loved. Parent-child bonding begins with these moments of connection — moments that lay the foundation for a child’s emotional well-being and long-term success.

At Burke, we work to support families by alleviating stress and helping them to have the healthcare and community resources they need to thrive. Through trusted community care, we empower families to create the space and stability that enable them to light up when their children walk in the room.

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When parents go back to school

👋 Though a college degree can pay off in higher earnings and less likelihood of being unemployed, many would-be students who also are parents find that education to be unattainable.

As if being a parent weren’t complicated enough, adding college to the mix can be a huge hurdle in a higher education system designed for single 18-24-year-olds. Class schedules, tuition and fees, and lack of study spaces and child care can be a deal breaker.

Recognizing the value of a college education to families and the community, many 2-year colleges are making changes to accommodate student-parents.

This issue explores ways to make college more welcoming for student-parents and includes an interview with Daria Willis, president of Howard Community College in Maryland, who shares her journey from student-parent to college president.

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Centering — a revolution in healthcare

👋 Loneliness is an epidemic among parents, whether their families and friends are thousands of miles away or right next door. For expectant moms and new parents, loneliness brings significant health consequences, including higher risks for postpartum depression and cardiovascular problems. For new moms in particular, connections are key — from a support system to help with the logistics of preparing or caring for a new baby to a simple listening ear. We all need community.

This issue takes a closer look at CenteringPregnancy, a game-changing approach to maternal care where expectant women receive their prenatal care in a group setting.

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How to build strong youth mental health

👋 Earlier this month, I watched my older son pedal off to middle school, his overstuffed backpack weighing on his shoulders. He was heading toward new classes, new teachers, new friendships — and new pressures. This stage marks a monumental shift for him and his peers. As a parent, my role isn’t just to protect him when possible, but to equip him for the challenges he’ll encounter in the years ahead.

Much of what we do at the Burke Foundation is to try to help families build their children’s health and emotional well-being in those earliest, formative years so they’re better prepared to weather adolescence and beyond.

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Family child care needs our support

👋 As long as I’ve been a mom, I’ve relied on others to care for my sons while I work. That seems a pretty straightforward proposition. But for me and parents across the country, it can be financially, logistically, and emotionally taxing. Care often is expensive, hard to navigate, and chaotic when illness or a schedule change disrupts carefully orchestrated arrangements.

And we’re largely left to figure it out on our own because there’s no state or national policy infrastructure to advocate for affordable, quality child care. While some business leaders see the importance of supporting working families through child care subsidies and on-site facilities, most companies offer no child care benefits.

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Changing lives through community nursing

👋 The quality of care during pregnancy, delivery, and beyond is instrumental in moms’ ability to nurture their babies and get them off to a strong, healthy start in life.

Yet the healthcare system often fails women — especially women of color. Many report having experiences that make them feel their concerns or symptoms aren’t taken seriously and that their providers treat them with less respect than other patients.

One part of the solution is to make expert, culturally congruent nurse care available to new mothers — which is starting to happen in New Jersey through the state-run FamilyConnects NJ program that provides free nurse visits to families of newborns.

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The sandwich generation

👋 Taking care of your family is a delicate balance that many of us navigate each day: Who will stay home with the sick child? Who can get off work to pick up a toddler from daycare? Who’s keeping track of vaccinations and well-child visits?

It’s stressful in the best of times.

And then your parents face health issues.

That delicate balance is thrown off as your responsibilities expand: Different doctors and different types of care. Frequent trips to the hospital. Long-distance care management. Conversations about independent living.

Families sandwiched between caring for children and parents, while maintaining a job and their own well-being, face skyrocketing stress levels — and financial costs.

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It’s time for policy to catch up with families’ needs

👋 Families in New Jersey struggle to make sure their children are well cared for — especially families that work hard but can’t make ends meet.

These issues are well documented. So is the research showing that the time from pregnancy to age 2 is crucial to brain development and that the more nurturing children receive in that period, the healthier they will be for the rest of their lives.

As Dr. Dana Suskind, professor of surgery and pediatrics at the University of Chicago Medical Center, put it, “It’s time for policy to catch up with science.” Proof that it hasn’t: A New America report says of the nation’s youngest children, “We invest less in education than any other stage of life.

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