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Graduate education is a mess. Shouldn't universities fix it?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageWhat's the future?Jens Schott Knudsen, CC BY-NC

Colleges and universities in the United States remain among the most prestigious institutions of higher education in the world. But, concerned about rising costs and the job prospects of young men and women with undergraduate degrees, Americans these days tend to view education as more of a business...

Read more: Graduate education is a mess. Shouldn't universities fix it?

Jesuits as science missionaries for the Catholic Church

  • Written by The Conversation
imageJesuit astronomers with Chinese scholars in the 18th century.Les cahiers de Science et Vie October 2009

A Catholic, a Jesuit and a scientist walk into a bar. What do they have to talk about? And just how do those conversations go?

This scenario is no joking matter. Conflict as well as collaboration have characterized the historical relations between...

Read more: Jesuits as science missionaries for the Catholic Church

How could VW be so dumb? Blame the unethical culture endemic in business

  • Written by The Conversation
imageHow much can corporate culture explain VW's deception? Jim Young/Reuters

That far too much of the world’s corporate leadership is driven by moral midgets who have been educated far beyond their capacities for good judgment should be obvious after observing the events of the past week.

The financial industry-led economic collapse of 2008 should...

Read more: How could VW be so dumb? Blame the unethical culture endemic in business

Volkswagen scandal will send costly ripples through auto industry

  • Written by The Conversation
imageVolkswagen's woes will be shared by many. Reuters

Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn paid the price of losing his job after last week’s revelation that software designed to circumvent emission testing was installed on as many as 500,000 “clean diesel” vehicles sold in the US and as many as 11 million worldwide.

VW has long burnished...

Read more: Volkswagen scandal will send costly ripples through auto industry

VW needs massive marketing campaign to regain consumer trust – and survive

  • Written by The Conversation
imageDispleased: consumers have lost trust in Volkswagen – and its marketing. Robert Galbraith/Reuters

Over the years, we’ve seen quite a few scandals in the automotive industry. However, the recent one at Volkswagen sets the bar at a whole new level. This isn’t your garden variety crisis involving a mechanical or safety issue.

While...

Read more: VW needs massive marketing campaign to regain consumer trust – and survive

Pope Francis goes to Washington – but speaks past the politicians

  • Written by The Conversation
imageThe Pope in Congress: receptive audience?Tony Gentile/Reuters

Pope Francis this week made an historic presentation to the Joint Sessions of the US Congress. And in so doing, he took his message straight to the American people: “Today I would like not only to address you, but through you the entire people of the United States.”

Indeed, a...

Read more: Pope Francis goes to Washington – but speaks past the politicians

In too many ways, America's poorest communities are just like prison

  • Written by The Conversation
imagePope Francis will visit this Philadelphia prison on September 27 2015. Mark Makela/REUTERS

Pope Francis is going to prison.

After visiting with incarcerated individuals in a correctional facility in Philadelphia, he might offer us a simple suggestion: treat prisoners better.

But this advice hides an inconvenient truth.

The conditions experienced by...

Read more: In too many ways, America's poorest communities are just like prison

The risk of UN's Sustainable Development Goals: too many goals, too little focus

  • Written by The Conversation
imageNow comes the hard part. lukeredmond/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

As the world’s leaders gather at the United Nations Sustainable Development Summit in New York City this week, they face a busy agenda. Among their many tasks is the adoption of new global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) guiding actions toward 2030 – a major and much-needed...

Read more: The risk of UN's Sustainable Development Goals: too many goals, too little focus

More Articles ...

  1. To cut costs, college students are buying less food and even going hungry
  2. Hungry? Food choices are often influenced by forces out of your control
  3. Rise of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin begs question: what is money?
  4. Clinton stance on XL Pipeline reflects muscle of climate activists
  5. Vaping as a 'gateway' to smoking is still more hype than hazard
  6. Drake, Meek Mill and beef's prime place in rap culture
  7. Poland, long accustomed to emigration, must now confront immigration
  8. Learning from PowerPoint: is it time for teachers to move on?
  9. Despite Volkswagen's cheat, clean diesel is good technology today and the future
  10. Republicans and Democrats alike have love-hate relationship with Pope Francis
  11. Why US and Chinese cities will make or break any global climate deal
  12. Why the pope has yet to overturn the church's colonial legacy
  13. Pope Francis' call to house refugees echoes church history
  14. The West is on fire – and the US taxpayer is subsidizing it
  15. Why do people feel 'a rose by any other name' wouldn't fit as well?
  16. An innovative form of cheating emerges in MOOCs
  17. Brian Williams returns to the air – and memory research says we should give him a break
  18. How an art history class became more engaging with Twitter
  19. Patterns are math we love to look at
  20. How native advertisements could be the solution to the internet's bad-ad problem
  21. It's not a lack of self-control that keeps people poor
  22. How Europe helped save Obama's historic nuclear deal with Iran
  23. #BlackLivesMatter and the myth of a postracial America
  24. Waste disposal in US landfills underestimated by 115%
  25. Why should we care about Pope Francis' visit to the US?
  26. Globalism, refugee crisis is fueling xenophobia
  27. Hitler at home: how the Nazi PR machine remade the Führer's domestic image and duped the world
  28. Is the changing definition of autism narrowing what we think of as 'normal'?
  29. How low-tech farming innovations can make African farmers climate-resilient
  30. Sustainability science is a new academic discipline. But is it sustainable?
  31. Why the US has little to fear from Chinese leaders meeting with tech titans
  32. Vaccines back in the headlines – here's what the experts say
  33. The Fed and the art of purposeful inactivity
  34. Here's the score for Obama's college scorecard: more minuses than pluses
  35. Do you need a book to sit in the Oval Office?
  36. Europe's refugee crisis: the last time round it was much, much worse
  37. Scientists at work: space balloons and charged particles above the Arctic Circle
  38. The Conversation US is growing
  39. The Federal Reserve is losing credibility by not raising rates now
  40. Dinnertime storytelling makes kids voracious readers
  41. It's time for doctors to hang up the white coats for good
  42. What's a politician's best tool? A razor
  43. Want more girls to be interested in computer science? Change some classroom stereotypes
  44. Native shrubs: a simple fix for drought-stricken crops in Sub-Saharan Africa
  45. Three women scholars grade Carly Fiorina's performance at the GOP debate
  46. Why the Fed is no longer center of the financial universe
  47. Thank an aging audience for Facebook's proposed dislike button
  48. Capitalism must evolve to solve the climate crisis
  49. When Greenpeace hires journalists, it's a double-edged sword
  50. The key to your health could be in your ZIP code