A history of Pride flags
The Pride flag has gone through many iterations over the years because it has been progressing with the community to advance inclusion. Morgan Evans from the Edmonton Queer History Project runs us through the history.
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Quartararo takes pole for Dutch MotoGP, Brad Binder 16th ahead of sprint race
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Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
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Growing Up. Family Portrait Of Boy, His Father And Grandfather Sitting Together At Home. Side View, ... More Shallow Depth Parenting is one of life's most rewarding yet demanding responsibilities. For those raising Gen Z and Alpha generations, the demands have never been higher. These children are coming of age in a world that values individuality, hyper-personalization, and rapid innovation. The challenge is clear: how do we empower parents to help their children thrive in a future that values adaptability over predictability, creativity over conformity, and emotional intelligence over credentials? To meet this challenge, parents must rethink traditional approaches to raising children. Gone are the days when success could be distilled into a straightforward formula of good grades, extracurricular achievements, and steady career paths. Today's world demands that we prepare our children to forge their own unique paths, where their individuality becomes their greatest strength. Personalization in parenting isn't a luxury, it's a necessity. The data and lessons emerging today underline why this shift has become so critical, not just for families but for the future workforce. Breaking Free from Traditional Expectations Standardized parenting frameworks have long prioritized rigid milestones and predefined definitions of success. But for Gen Z and Alpha kids, this traditional blueprint can feel irrelevant and restrictive. Research shows that 57% of Gen Z teens feel pressured by their parents to attend college, even as alternative education pathways, such as professional certifications and micro-credentials, grow in value. Among Millennials, this number is just as prevalent, signaling that parents' expectations often fail to align with today's evolving opportunities. This pressure can have hidden costs. Adolescents whose career or education decisions are steered by their parents often experience school burnout, increased anxiety, and depressive symptoms. A 2025 study by Youth Studies Quarterly found that such interference not only erodes self-confidence but also impairs young people's ability to make decisions independently later in life. Parents must shift their focus from controlling to empowering. Instead of aligning their children's futures with societal expectations, they must prioritize their child's unique passions and purpose. This doesn't mean parents should take a hands-off approach but rather that they must evolve into advocates dedicated to co-creating a roadmap for their child's future. Note: Watch Brielle Lubin in 2019, at age 14, discuss this issue. She will begin her studies at NYU this fall. Technology's Influence on Identity and Potential For Gen Z and Alpha generations, technology isn't just a tool, it's a foundation of everyday life. These digital natives have grown up in a world of constant connectivity, blending their online and offline identities seamlessly. While this familiarity with technology offers opportunities for learning, communication, and creativity, it also comes with challenges. Studies reveal technology's double-edged sword. 89% of teens aged 13-18 report that social media creates pressure to conform to specific standards, damaging self-esteem and inflating anxiety levels. Additionally, heavy use of digital platforms correlates with reduced focus and greater exposure to misinformation during critical development periods. Parents must actively support their children in navigating this complex digital landscape. It's not enough to view technology as either good or bad. Instead, it must be positioned as a tool to enhance learning and creativity, with clear boundaries to prevent overuse. Families that engage in technology-related discussions and establish mindful screen-time practices report fewer behavioral challenges and greater emotional resilience in their children. These skills are essential for a generation destined to enter a workforce where technology and human creativity must coexist in harmony. Personalization in Learning Personalized approaches to education are foundational to preparing today's kids for tomorrow's challenges. Research from RAND Corporation reveals that students in tailored learning environments experience up to 3 percentile points of improvement in critical subjects like math and reading. More importantly, personalization in learning provides children with a sense of ownership over their progress, teaching them self-regulation, critical thinking, and adaptability. Supporting personalized education means rethinking traditional metrics of success. Consider the rise of micro-credentials, for example. These targeted certifications allow individuals to master specific skills in less time and at a lower cost than traditional degrees. Over 90% of students worldwide say that micro-credentials help them stand out to employers, and 80% of hiring managers agree that they strengthen job applications. Parents can play a pivotal role by encouraging their children to explore these alternative pathways. Whether it's a technical certification in coding or a leadership course in emotional intelligence, these investments in skill development help young people build a competitive edge while aligning with their unique interests and talents. The Effects on the Future Workforce What happens when we adopt a parenting model that prioritizes individuality and emotional resilience? We don't just raise thriving individuals, we also shape a stronger, more capable future workforce. The skills that personalized parenting nurtures are precisely the traits the professional world increasingly demands. When you overlay the challenges parents face in raising Gen Z and Alpha generations with the depersonalization crisis in the workplace and today's leadership crisis (where old ideas are used to solve new challenges), a common thread emerges as large organizations across industries condition their employees to act, think, and approach their work in a highly standardized way. This influences their personal lives, creating a cycle of conformity that stifles individuality and creativity that gets passed on to their children. Organizations were not designed to serve the distinct and unique needs of people—whether they are consumers, employees, patients, parents or students. This systemic rigidity underscores the importance of raising children who can break free from these molds, redefine success on their own terms, and contribute to a workforce that values innovation, empathy, and purpose. By empowering individuality at home, parents are not just preparing their children for personal success, they are equipping them to lead the reinvention of outdated systems and create a future where people, not processes, come first.


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Checks and balances limiting Trump's power
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