jwestanderson's profile picture. London-based journalist & author, 10-year vet of @NYTimes. Coming Jan 2015: The Disengaged Teen: Helping Kids Learn Better, Feel Better and Live Better (Crown)

Jenny Anderson

@jwestanderson

London-based journalist & author, 10-year vet of @NYTimes. Coming Jan 2015: The Disengaged Teen: Helping Kids Learn Better, Feel Better and Live Better (Crown)

We were on @AmanpourCoPBS @amanpour! Great q's and tough interviewer which I always love.

In an age of advanced AI, climate change and conflict, "The Disengaged Teen" co-authors @jwestanderson and @RebeccaWinthrop say we're not teaching children the skills they need. They join @MichelMcQMartin to explain. youtu.be/SJmIp4LmwDc

AmanpourCoPBS's tweet card. Why Teens Are Checking Out of School — and How to Bring Them Back |...

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Why Teens Are Checking Out of School — and How to Bring Them Back |...



Agency, the 2024 election and Anna Freud open.substack.com/pub/howtobebra…


Jenny Anderson reposted

Live from New York, it's Saturday night.

From Kamala HQ

Becoming a low-key public person (or, coming out of my social media shell). My latest substack post. open.substack.com/pub/howtobebra…


Jenny Anderson reposted

Award-winning journalist Jenny Anderson & the Brookings Institution’s Rebecca Winthrop have been investigating why so many teens lose their love of learning. THE DISENGAGED TEEN, offers a powerful toolkit for parents to support their kids—out on 1/7/25. penguinrandomhouse.com/books/726142/t…

CrownPublishing's tweet image. Award-winning journalist Jenny Anderson & the Brookings Institution’s Rebecca Winthrop have been investigating why so many teens lose their love of learning.

THE DISENGAGED TEEN, offers a powerful toolkit for parents to support their kids—out on 1/7/25. 

penguinrandomhouse.com/books/726142/t…

Metacognition! Crucial skill for being a #goodlearner

Fascinating new paper uncovers a fresh cognitive bias: The illusion of information adequacy. Many of us believe we have "enough" information to make decisions—even when we're missing key details. Next time you're totally sure about something, ask yourself: -- What might I…

DanielPink's tweet image. Fascinating new paper uncovers a fresh cognitive bias: The illusion of information adequacy.

Many of us believe we have "enough" information to make decisions—even when we're missing key details. 

Next time you're totally sure about something, ask yourself: 

-- What might I…


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