Reflections on Research and the Impact of BrainWise

Posted On: August 8, 2024

Loneliness.

“Join or Die” is the title of a new documentary about Dr. Robert Putnam’s extensive research on loneliness (https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=4oDVf8sOG9w.)

The Harvard political scientist wrote Bowling Alone in 2000 and presented data showing the transformation of Americans from being social joiners to becoming isolated individuals. He warned of the negative consequences of this shift, including premature death and social unrest.

Dr. Putnam hoped the red flags raised by his research, conducted over more than 25 years, would boost a resurgence of fellowship. The documentary traces his efforts to use his findings to reverse the trend of increasing isolation. Instead, the problem has only worsened. In a recent New York Times interview about the film, he said the nation has become lonelier and more divided.

Reflecting on his work, he said “the only way to fix it is for us to start feeling that we have an obligation to care for other people.”

Unexpected Connections. BrainWise has benefited from Dr. Putnam’s research on loneliness and incorporated it into Wise Way #2, “Build a Constellation of Support.” Other research confirmed the importance of this concept, as well the need to learn other behavioral skills. This discovery was an aha! moment for me. It helped explain the impulsive, non-thinking behaviors that created problems in the lives of students and families in my caseload. I expected them to have skills they had never learned, and the idea of seeking help from experts for help or friendship from a group was something they had never considered.

Read more about Dr. Putnam’s work and other academics who have had an impact on BrainWise in the most recent newsletter.  https://conta.cc/3Swwp2n 

Learn more about research on BrainWise and results showing its impact on individuals.  The BrainWise Program – The BrainWise Program – Research and Results (brainwise-plc.org)

Please follow and like us:

BrainWise Newsletter #100: Stop and Think: A History of Building Brain Connections

Real Stories, Real Impact: BrainWise Educators Empower Generations   Dr. Eric Kandel received the 2000 Nobel Prize for his research describing neuroplasticity — how the brain builds connections when it learns something new. His findings inspired the development of BrainWise as a way to help children and youth learn skills to Stop and Think. The […]

Read More »

From Seed to Synapse

Cultivating Thinking Skills with BrainWise “Planting a seed” is how social worker Dr. Gary Brayton describes his decades-long advocacy for teaching BrainWise and training new instructors. He recently trained 32 health care workers, including longtime instructor Melissa Hudson, in Calgary, Alberta, to become BrainWise trainers. (for background see Hull newsletter   BW professional group.) These […]

Read More »

Bridging States, Building Minds

Shelia Nicholson is a double line in the Constellation of Support for students, teachers and families in the Ferguson, Missouri community. Last March, she took on a new mission: helping a class of low-performing third graders finish the year strong. She turned to BrainWise for guidance—and brought a powerful coalition with her.  (See her story […]

Read More »