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Is technology making us dumber or smarter? Yes

  • Written by Jonathan Coopersmith, Associate Professor of History, Texas A&M University
imageIs this happening to us? And is it good?Assembly line illustration from shutterstock.com

Editor’s note: This article is part of our collaboration with Point Taken, a new program from WGBH that will next air on Tuesday, June 21 on PBS and online at pbs.org. The show features fact-based debate on major issues of the day, without the shouting.

The...

Read more: Is technology making us dumber or smarter? Yes

How the Supreme Court decision on United States v. Texas will affect millions of families

  • Written by Heide Castañeda, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of South Florida

“We are just waiting,” says Lisa, a 19-year-old college student, the anxiety palpable in her voice. Lisa is a U.S. citizen, born and raised in South Texas. Her parents and older brother, however, are undocumented.

The entire family’s lives may be turned upside down in just a few days.

This month, the Supreme Court will issue a...

Read more: How the Supreme Court decision on United States v. Texas will affect millions of families

Chemical regulation bill clears Congress, but will it protect the public?

  • Written by Noah M. Sachs, Professor of Law and Director, Robert M. Merhige Jr. Center for Environmental Studies, University of Richmond
imageWhat's in that bottle? And is it safe?www.shutterstock.com

In a major overhaul of U.S. regulation of toxic chemicals, Congress last week passed the Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act, the largest piece of environmental legislation passed in the United States since 1990. President Obama is expected to sign it into law...

Read more: Chemical regulation bill clears Congress, but will it protect the public?

Did Donald Trump kill the Tea Party?

  • Written by Robert Boatright, Associate Professor of Political Science, Clark University

Americans have been riveted by the 2016 presidential primaries and the media spectacle that has surrounded the Donald Trump campaign.

This excitement has not carried through to the down-ballot races. In fact, it has been a quiet primary season for candidates running for things other than president.

So far, 2016 has featured little national...

Read more: Did Donald Trump kill the Tea Party?

Why schools should provide one laptop per child

  • Written by Binbin Zheng, Assistant Professor, Michigan State University
imageDoes technology help with learning?John S. and James L. Knight Foundation Follow, CC BY-SA

A recent international study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development found no positive evidence of impact of educational technology on student performance.

It did not find any significant improvement in reading, math or science in...

Read more: Why schools should provide one laptop per child

Fentanyl: widely used, deadly when abused

  • Written by David A. Edwards, M.D. Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology & Pain Medicine, Vanderbilt University
imageFentanyl is 100 times stronger than heroin. Alcibiades via Wikimedia Commons

Fentanyl, a synthetic opioid narcotic about 100 times as potent as morphine, continues to be in the news, as deaths from fentanyl overdose continue to rise and even more potent nonpharmaceutical forms become available on the street. It was the drug in Prince’s body...

Read more: Fentanyl: widely used, deadly when abused

What we can learn from an Indonesian ethnicity that recognizes five genders

  • Written by Sharyn Graham Davies, Associate Professor of Social Sciences, Auckland University of Technology

On June 13, when a judge in Oregon allowed a person to legally choose neither sex and be classified as “nonbinary,” transgender activists rejoiced. It’s thought to be the first ruling of its kind in a country that, until now, has required that people mark “male” or “female” on official identity documents.

Th...

Read more: What we can learn from an Indonesian ethnicity that recognizes five genders

Disrupting pro-ISIS online 'ecosystems' could help thwart real-world terrorism

  • Written by Neil Johnson, Professor of Physics, University of Miami
imageSchematic diagram of an aggregate made up of linked users, with the mathematical equation that describes this online pro-ISIS ecology.Neil Johnson, CC BY-ND

Supporters of the Islamic State, or ISIS, around the world gather online, becoming members of virtual communities in much the same way any of us might join online groups focused on some common...

Read more: Disrupting pro-ISIS online 'ecosystems' could help thwart real-world terrorism

Appeals court upholds net neutrality rules -- why you should care

  • Written by Amanda Lotz, Professor of Communication Studies and Screen Arts & Cultures, University of Michigan
imageThe court ruling will keep all internet traffic treated equally.Laptop with arrows via shutterstock.com

If you like binge-watching Netflix, streaming audio or online gaming, then you should be celebrating this week. And if your business depends on reaching a wide audience online, you should join in. A federal appeals court decision this week means...

Read more: Appeals court upholds net neutrality rules -- why you should care

Orlando after tragedy: much more than world's theme park

  • Written by Jeff Kunerth, Visiting Instructor, Journalism, Nicholson School of Communication , University of Central Florida

Orlando has long been characterized as a place of transients, a perpetual churn of people moving in and out. Orlando is a stop, a stepping stone, not a destination. The city once even referred to its homeless as “transients” – as if they were something temporary, rather than permanent.

I certainly felt temporary when I took my...

Read more: Orlando after tragedy: much more than world's theme park

More Articles ...

  1. Losing control: The dangers of killer robots
  2. How will we remember black women on the anniversary of the Charleston shooting?
  3. Stanford sexual assault: what changed with the survivor's testimony
  4. Where does anti-LGBT bias come from – and how does it translate into violence?
  5. Why it's so hard for students to have their debts forgiven
  6. Raise a cup -- of coffee; WHO no longer says it can cause cancer
  7. Global warming to expose more people to Zika-spreading mosquito _Aedes aegypti_
  8. In the wake of tragedy, Trump takes rhetoric of fear to a whole new level
  9. LGBT equality doesn't exist – but here's how to fight for it
  10. The Orlando shooting: exploring the link between hate crimes and terrorism
  11. How did Brazil go from rising BRIC to sinking ship?
  12. Fathers also want to ‘have it all,’ study says
  13. The truth about for-profit colleges and Trump University
  14. 48 hours as a Muslim American: A professor reflects
  15. Graphene isn’t the only Lego in the materials-science toy box
  16. How can hospitals possibly prepare for disasters? With practice and planning
  17. Social media is changing our digital news habits – but to varying degrees in US and UK
  18. Finding Nemo – and Dory – is easy. Deciding whether they should be pets is harder
  19. Two violent men, two symptoms of the same sickness
  20. Another mass shooting – what the experts say
  21. Gun researchers see a public health emergency in Orlando mass shooting. Here's why.
  22. Terrorism and tourism: what cities should do to prepare for an attack
  23. Were this year's Tony Awards only a superficial nod to diversity?
  24. Does China manipulate its currency as Donald Trump claims?
  25. New atlas shows extent of light pollution -- what does it mean for our health?
  26. Climate change could alter the chemistry of deepwater lakes and harm ecosystems
  27. Fighting malevolent AI: artificial intelligence, meet cybersecurity
  28. Personal beliefs versus scientific innovation: getting past a flat Earth mentality
  29. Aid to dying: What Jainism -- one of India's oldest religions -- teaches us
  30. How might drone racing drive innovation?
  31. Californians now have right to 'aid in dying': How did we get here?
  32. Can Jude Law's 'Genius' capture the essence of Thomas Wolfe?
  33. Putting CO2 away for good by turning it into stone
  34. Technology is improving – why is rural broadband access still a problem?
  35. How Hillary Clinton's 'smart power' feminism informs her foreign policy
  36. Are some students more at risk of assault on campuses?
  37. Campuses aren't safe. Are universities doing enough?
  38. Are you getting the best health care? Evidence says: maybe not
  39. Trump's 'America First': echoes from 1940s
  40. Clinton seizes on environmental justice but progress requires deep reforms
  41. How Bernie Sanders can still become president
  42. Saturated fats make some cells lose track of time -- and that's bad
  43. Why the Deep Space Atomic Clock is key for future space exploration
  44. Are pop stars destined to die young?
  45. Three female scholars react to Hillary Clinton's historic nomination
  46. How fish and clean water can protect coral reefs from warming oceans
  47. Are we in the midst of a public space crisis?
  48. Using computers to better understand art
  49. We behave a lot more badly than we remember
  50. How the Antiquities Act has expanded the national park system and fueled struggles over land protection