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Dr. Spock's timeless lessons in parenting

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
Author and physician Dr. Benjamin Spock in NYC in 1974.AP Photo/Jerry Mosey

The book ignited a revolution, breaking free from conventional wisdom that said children required schedules, discipline and little affection. Instead, “The Common Sense Book of Baby and Childcare,” written by Dr. Benjamin Spock and published in 1946, encouraged...

Read more: Dr. Spock's timeless lessons in parenting

New abortion laws contribute to sexist environments that harm everyone's health

  • Written by Patricia Homan, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Florida State University
Protesters in New York City on May 21, 2019 express their opposition to restrictive abortion laws.Mary Altaffer/AP Photo

Nine states have passed laws in 2019 alone that restrict abortion at the earliest stages of pregnancy. Those of us who study public health are becoming increasingly concerned about the potential for negative health consequences...

Read more: New abortion laws contribute to sexist environments that harm everyone's health

How climate change is driving emigration from Central America

  • Written by Miranda Cady Hallett, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Human Rights Center Research Fellow, University of Dayton
A farmer carries firewood during the dry season in Nicaragua, one of the Central American countries affected by a recent drought.Neil Palmer for CIAT/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

Clouds of dust rose behind the wheels of the pickup truck as we hurtled over the back road in Palo Verde, El Salvador. When we got to the stone-paved part of the road, the driver...

Read more: How climate change is driving emigration from Central America

I wrote a book about email – and found myself pining for the days of letter-writing

  • Written by Randy Malamud, Regents' Professor of English, Georgia State University
On paper, lives were lived, trysts arranged, manifestos mailed and wars waged.MCAD Library/flickr, CC BY

Email has become so prevalent in our lives that I felt compelled to write about it for a Bloomsbury series called “Object Lessons” that examines “the hidden lives of ordinary things.”

Perhaps I chose this topic because I...

Read more: I wrote a book about email – and found myself pining for the days of letter-writing

How nine days underwater helps scientists understand what life on a Moon base will be like

  • Written by Csilla Ari D`Agostino, Research Assistant Professor of Psychology, University of South Florida
Csilla Ari D`Agostino and her teammate carry out experiments outside their undersea habitat.NASA

As NASA prepares to return to the Moonin the next couple of years and possibly even establish bases, it needs a better understanding of how the human body performs in such an inhospitable habitat.

To that end, two astronauts, two researchers (including...

Read more: How nine days underwater helps scientists understand what life on a Moon base will be like

Lessons from the UN peacekeeping mission in Rwanda, 25 years after the genocide it failed to stop

  • Written by Samantha Lakin, PhD Candidate, Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies; Fulbright Scholar, Clark University
Family photos of the victims of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, displayed at a 25th anniversary memorial in April 2019.AP Photo/Ben Curtis

The United Nations deployment to Rwanda seemed like a straightforward peacekeeping mission back in 1993.

A lightly armed force of approximately 2,500 peacekeepers would help implement the Arusha Agreement, a 1993...

Read more: Lessons from the UN peacekeeping mission in Rwanda, 25 years after the genocide it failed to stop

How many Americans believe in climate change? Probably more than you think, research in Indiana suggests

  • Written by Matthew Houser, Assistant Research Scientist and Faculty Fellow, Indiana University
Concern about climate change is broader than many Hoosiers think. Katherine Welles/Shutterstock

Indiana certainly doesn’t look like a state that’s ready to confront climate change. Its former governor, Vice President Mike Pence, has questioned whether human actions affect the climate. In 2016 the majority of Indiana residents voted for...

Read more: How many Americans believe in climate change? Probably more than you think, research in Indiana...

Why are there so few women CEOs?

  • Written by Michael Holmes, Jim Moran Associate Professor of Strategic Management, Florida State University

Women comprise about 47% of the U.S. workforce, yet they make up barely a quarter of all senior executives at large U.S. public companies. Even worse, only about 5% of Standard & Poor’s 500 companies have female CEOs.

Moreover, women who become CEOs are often appointed to companies that are in crisis or are performing poorly, as in the...

Read more: Why are there so few women CEOs?

From cohabitation to cohousing: Older baby boomers create living arrangements to suit new needs

  • Written by Nancy P. Kropf, Dean, Perimeter College & Professor, Social Work, Georgia State University
Elders are looking at new living arrangements geared toward their desires, not a developer's. Rawpixel/Shutterstock.com

One of the major questions of growing older is, “where do I want to live as I age?” For many baby boomers, an important goal is staying independent as long as possible. Many in this generation desire to age in their...

Read more: From cohabitation to cohousing: Older baby boomers create living arrangements to suit new needs

How to get preschoolers ready to learn math

  • Written by Erica Zippert, Postdoctoral Scholar of Psychology, Vanderbilt University
Those shapes may prove as constructive as the numbers.NadyaEugene/Shutterstock.com

If you’re a parent of a preschooler, you might be wondering how you can help set your child up for success once they enter kindergarten.

By now, you have probably heard of the importance of reading and talking to your child to support their language and literacy...

Read more: How to get preschoolers ready to learn math

More Articles ...

  1. Good communication is a key part of disaster response
  2. Here's what happens when political bubbles collide
  3. For some children born abroad, US citizenship has never been a guarantee
  4. 1 in 5 college students takes math courses that repeat what they already know
  5. Artificial intelligence in medicine raises legal and ethical concerns
  6. One skill that doesn't deteriorate with age
  7. Why methane emissions matter to climate change: 5 questions answered
  8. An opioid success story: Efforts to minimize painkillers after surgery appear to be working
  9. Why damage estimates for hurricanes like Dorian won't capture the full cost of climate change-fueled disasters
  10. Damage estimates for hurricanes like Dorian don't capture the full cost of climate change-fueled disasters
  11. Complex birdsongs help biologists piece together the evolution of lifelong learning
  12. The American Founders made sure the president could never suspend Congress
  13. Stop calling it a choice: Biological factors drive homosexuality
  14. 7 tips on how to take better notes
  15. In a world of cyber threats, the push for cyber peace is growing
  16. Evolution doesn't proceed in a straight line – so why draw it that way?
  17. How American Christian media promoted charity abroad
  18. How to address America's lead crisis and provide safe drinking water for all
  19. The test that could save the life of a long-time smoker you know
  20. Curious Kids: Why do we say 'OK'?
  21. When religious ideology drives abortion policy, poor women suffer the consequences
  22. Colombia's peace process under stress: 6 essential reads
  23. A new solution for America's empty churches: A change of faith
  24. Parents can help kids catch up in reading with a 10-minute daily routine
  25. Preparing for hurricanes: 3 essential reads
  26. How do hospitals know what to do when hurricanes approach?
  27. Surveying archaeologists across the globe reveals deeper and more widespread roots of the human age, the Anthropocene
  28. Why the queen said yes to Boris Johnson's request to suspend Parliament
  29. Curious Kids: Why is money green?
  30. Sexual abuse against gay and bi men brings unique stigma and harm
  31. These are the customers who support sex trafficking in the US
  32. Why increasing Arab-Israeli closeness matters
  33. Why companies file for bankruptcy – and how it protects both debtors and creditors
  34. Should parents help their kids with homework?
  35. Should investors buy marijuana stocks?
  36. Worker-protection laws aren't ready for an automated future
  37. 5 things to consider before taking out a student loan
  38. 4 reasons why social media election data can misread public opinion
  39. You’d be better off lighting your money on fire than giving it to a politician to spend on TV ads
  40. Humanitarian forensic scientists trace the missing, identify the dead and comfort the living
  41. Why would anyone want to sit on a plane for over 18 hours? An economist takes the world's longest flight
  42. Blinking lights don't make a better knee brace – fighting cognitive biases in testing orthopedic devices
  43. Hurricane evacuation of nursing home residents still an unsolved challenge
  44. México quiere construir un tren en el corazón de la región Maya, ¿debería de hacerlo?
  45. A new tax on big college and university endowments is sending higher education a message
  46. Curious Kids: What is the smallest animal ever?
  47. What's private depends on who you are and where you live
  48. How male 'porn superfans' really view women
  49. Companies don't need permission from the Business Roundtable to be better corporate citizens
  50. 3 ways China benefits from the Hong Kong protests