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The No. 1 parenting trend that worries me


I spent seven years studying high-achieving students, interviewing hundreds of them and their families.

Many young people I met described monitoring grades, rankings, and résumés as if they were constantly evaluating their worth. In some families, achievement took on an outsized role, leading some children to wonder whether their parents’ love was tied to how well they performed.

Achievement culture promises to open doors, suggesting that better grades and better college degrees guarantee better futures. But a growing body of research shows that this relentless chase can breed perfectionism, a trait linked to higher rates of anxiety and depression.

So what can a parent do to protect against this narrow view of success and self-worth?

We can help young people turn their self-focused attention outward. When children shift from “How am I doing?” to “Where can I be useful?” they develop a stronger identity, rooted in contribution rather than performance. Small, everyday ways of being needed — helping a neighbor, being counted on at home, showing up for a team — can buffer against that harmful inner-scorekeeping and build a sturdier sense of self-worth.

When kids anchor their efforts in something beyond themselves, everyday stressors become more manageable. They stop believing they are only a grade or a score, and start feeling like a person who matters in the world. Here’s how:

1. Help kids notice genuine needs around them 

Recently, a woman told me she was on her way to the park with her two young kids when she saw their elderly neighbor raking her lawn. The neighbor waved off the woman’s offer to help, but still, she unloaded her kids from the car, and they grabbed rakes, piling leaves into bags.

The kids talked about it all afternoon — how happy their neighbor was, how much fun they had, and how good it felt to be useful. They were experiencing what psychologists call a “helper’s high” and a growing sense of agency.

To help children look beyond themselves, try prompts like “What do you think she might need today?” or “Who could use a hand right now?” Regular acts, such as checking on a neighbor, delivering a meal, and volunteering, strengthen kids’ sense of belonging within their community.

2. Build contribution into daily routines



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