When US organization Children and Screens: Institute of Digital Media and Child Development convened over 100 global experts (scholars, educators, care providers, and leaders from youth- and family-serving organizations) for its invitation-only retreat—Character Matters: Values and Resilience in the Digital Age— it underscored a critical truth: in a rapidly evolving digital world, empathy is not optional. It is foundational.

Mary Gordon’s participation brought a vital perspective that will also be captured in a public 4-part webinar series to be released in Fall 2026. Grounded in decades of evidence, empathy must be intentionally nurtured not only in children, but in the systems, relationships, and environments that shape them.

Empathy Begins in Relationship—Especially in a Digital Age

The Double-Edged Nature of Digital Technology

Reclaiming What We Value: From Achievement to Caring

Another powerful thread that Mary sewed in the retreat was the need to rebalance what we prioritize for children.

In a culture that often emphasizes achievement and competition, empathy can be sidelined. Yet the development of intrinsic motivation and intrinsic pride—rather than external validation—is essential for moral and emotional growth.

Scaling Impact Through the Empathy Movement

Mary’s participation in this global convening reflects a broader strategy: advancing the Empathy Movement as a force for systems-level change.

Roots of Empathy:

  • Develops empathy directly in children through classroom programs
  • Engages global leaders, researchers, and institutions to embed empathy into policies, practices, and design

Because when empathy shapes not only individuals—but the environments around them—the impact is deeper and more enduring

Child by Child—and System by System

This is how Roots of Empathy brings its mission to life:

  • Building empathy in children, and
  • Shaping the world those children grow up in

In a digital age that is redefining how children connect, learn, and see themselves, this work has never been more urgent.

This is how we change the world—child by child, and system by system.

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