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Why mayors are looking for ideas outside the city limits

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageLos Angeles looks abroad. Cesarexpo, CC BY-SA

When our dear colleague and cofounder of the Initiative on Cities program at Boston University, former Boston Mayor Tom Menino, passed away one year ago, letters poured in to our offices at Boston University.

The intimate condolences from Boston’s many neighborhoods – Hyde Park, Roslindale,...

Read more: Why mayors are looking for ideas outside the city limits

Can innovators build a future that's both disruptive and just?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageBicycles fueling change in KenyaThomas Mukoya/Reuters

Today – October 30 – MIT’s Media Lab celebrates its 30th anniversary.

The Media Lab is a place that takes very seriously the idea that we can invent a better future and have it spread around the globe. It’s a place that’s helped invent things that are very serious,...

Read more: Can innovators build a future that's both disruptive and just?

They might sound gross, but intestinal worms can actually be good for you

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFour rat tapeworms harvested from a single laboratory rat are shown in a six-well plate. The worms don’t harm the rats. Each worm, between two and three feet long, can produce more than 1,000 eggs per day. William Parker, CC BY-NC-SA

Intestinal worms have an incredibly bad reputation. The thought of them sneaking around inside our bodies and...

Read more: They might sound gross, but intestinal worms can actually be good for you

What gets students motivated to work harder? Not money

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat motivates kids?woodleywonderworks, CC BY

Rewarding teachers financially for student achievement is an increasingly common practice, despite mixed evidence as to whether it improves results. Some scholars have instead suggested paying students.

But giving kids cash for grades and scores hasn’t proved straightforward either. So maybe the...

Read more: What gets students motivated to work harder? Not money

Paul Ryan just accepted the worst job in politics

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageRyan wields brand new speaker's gavel, October 29 2015. Gary Cameron/REUTERS

Republicans voted overwhelmingly to make Paul Ryan the new speaker of the House of Representatives on Thursday, but the Wisconsin congressman has no reason to celebrate. He just got the worst job in American politics.

In theory, the House speaker is an immensely powerful...

Read more: Paul Ryan just accepted the worst job in politics

Breaking the link between a conservative worldview and climate skepticism

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFormer New York Governor George Pataki: "I think part of the problem is the...way Republicans think about climate change."Rick Wilking/Reuters

The tide is finally turning. In last night’s third Republican debates, South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham and former New York Governor George Pataki both acknowledged the scientific consensus that...

Read more: Breaking the link between a conservative worldview and climate skepticism

What should we make of Paul Ryan’s fondness for Ayn Rand?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageRepresentative Paul Ryan arrives to talk to the media after being nominated for speaker of the House of Representatives on Capitol Hill in Washington October 28 2015.Yuri Gripas/Reuters

Paul Ryan, the Republican congressman from Wisconsin who was just elected speaker of the US House of Representatives, has acknowledged his admiration for novelist...

Read more: What should we make of Paul Ryan’s fondness for Ayn Rand?

Evolutionary psychology explains why haunted houses creep us out

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIsolated, crumbling, and full of twists and turns.'House' via www.shutterstock.com

The Haunted House is a time-honored horror setting. All of us have shivered our way through spooky flicks such as The Haunting, The Amityville Horror, The Sentinel and Poltergeist.

It’s not only at the movies that we pay good money to frighten ourselves to...

Read more: Evolutionary psychology explains why haunted houses creep us out

Solar power can cut consumers' bills and still be good for utilities

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageRooftop solar panels: will they kill power companies or can they help them?kincuri/flickr, CC BY-NC

The cost of solar energy continues to fall, so it is no surprise that more people are adopting solar.

This rapid growth of rooftop solar, however, has led many electric utilities to try to apply the brakes. A number have lobbied to change the...

Read more: Solar power can cut consumers' bills and still be good for utilities

Do liberal arts students learn how to collaborate?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDance is about creating work in a collaborative way.Joseph Mehling, CC BY-NC-ND

Liberal arts colleges teach many valuable skills, but collaboration is not often among them.

This is curious, because virtually all human activities involve collective behavior. A conversation, or an article such as this, takes at least two to tango (or tangle, as the...

Read more: Do liberal arts students learn how to collaborate?

More Articles ...

  1. Scholars on the GOP debate: middle-class struggles take center stage as Rubio walks tightrope
  2. How CNBC created a GOP debate for the Twitter age
  3. Why can’t the UN protect civilians in places like Syria?
  4. What are the limits to free speech in schools?
  5. How texting helped fuel the anti-austerity protests roiling Europe
  6. In the fight against anemia, iron fortification is a clutch player
  7. Why aren't more women running for office?
  8. Could Hurricane Patricia be a harbinger of storms in a warming climate?
  9. Does 'translating' Shakespeare into modern English diminish its greatness?
  10. Why Google's plan to blanket wilderness with Wi-Fi is a bad idea
  11. Sugar isn't just empty, fattening calories -- it's making us sick
  12. California universities launch experiment to go carbon-neutral 'at scale'
  13. Tracking American eels on the open sea to crack the mystery of their migration
  14. When gang violence goes viral
  15. The modern, molecular hunt for the world's biodiversity
  16. The humble (ad-free!) origins of the first World Series broadcasts
  17. Explainer: what's the debt ceiling and why it's an obsolete way to control spending
  18. Obama calls for limits on school testing. Here's why
  19. Jeb Bush needs a home run in Wednesday's GOP debate
  20. Did El Niño give Hurricane Patricia more kick?
  21. Sometimes less is better – so why don't doctors 'deintensify' medical treatment?
  22. How American schools are making inequality worse
  23. The problems with Big History and turning science into myth
  24. Are we sleep-deprived or just darkness-deprived?
  25. China's economic slowdown threatens African progress
  26. How Playboy skirted the anti-porn crusade of the 1950s
  27. Does 'Twitter Moments' herald the comeback of human beings?
  28. Is your doctor choosing the right IV?
  29. MIT rejects fossil fuel divestment but is still a leader on climate change
  30. Refugee passports could end border delays in the Balkans
  31. Why it's wrong for pediatricians to eliminate daily screen time recommendations
  32. Why we should pay attention to Poland's elections
  33. America's rental affordability crisis is about to go from bad to worse
  34. Benghazi committee grills Clinton for 11 hours, yields zero new facts
  35. Is lagging on climate change a political liability?
  36. Explainer: what it will take to make computer science education available in all schools
  37. The New York Times and Washington Post are ignoring civilians killed by US drone strikes
  38. Are we recycling too much of our trash?
  39. Why your father's Playboy can't compete in today's world of hard-core porn
  40. A gambling expert weighs in: what makes daily fantasy sports so alluring – and dangerous – for young men?
  41. Will 'sew-bots' stitch up a future for American Apparel?
  42. The dark side of free markets
  43. Women preferred for STEM professorships – as long as they’re equal to or better than male candidates
  44. Can it get more absurd? Now music teachers are being tested based on math and reading scores
  45. Canadian election: Scholars on what the rest of the world needs to know
  46. Can we expand solar power dramatically without damaging protected lands?
  47. Trump's wall and the cost-benefit analysis of immigration
  48. In 19 states, it's okay to hit kids with a wooden board
  49. Ruling shows Europe still vexed over NSA spying, leaving US companies in legal limbo
  50. New DNA analysis says your pooch's ancestors were Central Asian wolves