Personal and Social Management
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
‘We need to act,’ health minister says as Canada seeks feedback on men’s health
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026She woke up to ‘We’re at war’ in Ukraine. Now Mariia Vainshtein is a New York City tennis champion
7 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026Social media companies face legal reckoning over mental health harms to children
7 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026Making the most of Winnipeg’s biggest opportunity
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026‘Anti-social’ dancer fell in love with metal, ‘community’ at WECC
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2026‘Looksmaxxing’ hammers home a new standard of attractiveness
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 14, 2026Low/no alcohol drinks officially a movement
6 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 23, 2026Attention-grabbing screens demean us, bit by bit
8 minute read Preview Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026Province hunting for web-based system to better assess and help youth with mental-health, addiction issues
3 minute read Preview Friday, Jan. 2, 2026Denmark plans to severely restrict social media use for young people
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025Canadian sprinter Brendon Rodney helping with hurricane relief aid in Jamaica
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Nov. 8, 2025Local Buddhist Temple teaches true meaning of karma; promotes positive living
3 minute read Preview Thursday, Oct. 23, 2025Being human — by choice
4 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025I have found myself thinking about what draws me to a children’s television host who spent decades talking about how we live together in neighbourhoods.
Fred Rogers had this gentle way of speaking to children about the everyday challenges of being human: how to handle anger, disappointment, fear, and joy. But the more I consider his approach, the more I realize he wasn’t really teaching children how to behave, how to feel about themselves, how to understand the world around them. He was making something much more fundamental feel possible and worthwhile: he was making human decency aspirational.
Mr. Rogers knew that how we treat each other matters, not because it’s polite or proper, but because it’s how we create the kind of world we actually want to live in. His genius wasn’t in the specific lessons he taught, but in how he made kindness, patience, honesty, and gentleness feel like the most essential ways to be human.
I keep wondering if that’s what we’re missing sometimes. Not more rules about how to behave, but a sense that kindness and integrity are worth striving for.
Police investigating fires, vandalism at NDP cabinet ministers’ North End constituency offices
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, Sep. 23, 2025Bus riders, drivers welcome police safety initiative; two arrests made on day plan rolled out
5 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 19, 2025Read and research, before engaging your rage
4 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 19, 2025Bidding an unfond farewell to the fitness test
6 minute read Preview Thursday, Sep. 18, 2025Stop the online world, I want to get off
5 minute read Preview Saturday, Sep. 13, 2025Day of free services, entertainment offers heartwarming helping hand to city’s homeless
4 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 12, 2025Widespread availability of graphic Charlie Kirk shooting video shows content moderation challenges
6 minute read Preview Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025Caring for our communities with even small gestures
6 minute read Monday, Sep. 8, 2025There’s something that keeps returning to my thoughts as I move through my daily routines, something that sits quietly in the spaces between errands and conversations. It’s about the small things we often don’t notice, the everyday necessities that most of us take for granted.