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Why the nation should screen all students for trauma like California does

  • Written by Sunny Shin, Associate Professor, Virginia Commonwealth University
The effects of childhood trauma can be long-lasting.shutterstock.com/lightspring

As the first person to hold the new role of Surgeon General of California, Dr. Nadine Burke Harris is pushing an unprecedented plan to implement universal screenings for childhood trauma within the state’s schools.

Childhood trauma is defined by the National...

Read more: Why the nation should screen all students for trauma like California does

Did bees live in the time of dinosaurs?

  • Written by Fred Dyer, Professor, Department of Integrative Biology, Michigan State University
A fossilized bee in amber.Fossilmuseum.net, CC BY-NC

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com.


Did bees and dinosaurs live at the same time? – Gabriel H., 7, Providence, Rhode Island


Yes, and in fact they shared the planet for...

Read more: Did bees live in the time of dinosaurs?

Why do teachers make us read old stories?

  • Written by Elisabeth Gruner, Associate Professor of English, University of Richmond
Teachers often assign older books.vovidzha/Shutterstock.com

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com.


Why do teachers make us read old stories? Nathan, 12, Chicago, Illinois


There are probably as many reasons to read old stories as...

Read more: Why do teachers make us read old stories?

How to boost recycling: Reward consumers with discounts, deals and social connections

  • Written by Magali (Maggie) Delmas, Professor of Management Institute of the Environment & Sustainability, Anderson School of Management, University of California, Los Angeles
More of this, please.PictureAccent/Shutterstock.com

You finish that last sip of morning coffee and stare at the empty paper cup in your hand. Should it go into the recycling bin, compost, or be landfilled or incinerated?

You are not alone. Most Americans are confused about recycling, and the crisis driven by China’s decision to stop accepting...

Read more: How to boost recycling: Reward consumers with discounts, deals and social connections

How rich people like Gordon Sondland buy their way to being US ambassadors – 5 questions answered

  • Written by Dennis Jett, Professor of International Affairs, Pennsylvania State University
Some positions attract more political appointments -- like those in Western Europe.Markus Pfaff/Shutterstock.com

In every other developed democratic country, the role of ambassador, with only very rare exceptions, is given to career diplomats who have spent decades learning the art of international relations.

In the U.S., however, many ambassadors...

Read more: How rich people like Gordon Sondland buy their way to being US ambassadors – 5 questions answered

Chile's political crisis is another brutal legacy of long-dead dictator Pinochet

  • Written by Paul W. Posner, Associate Professor, Clark University
Protest music in Santiago, Chile, Nov. 12, 2019. AP Photo/Esteban Felix

After weeks of intense, sometimes violent nationwide protests, Chilean President Sebastian Piñera has relented to demands to rewrite the Chilean Constitution. The protesters say they want a new constitution to address Chile’s severe social and economic inequities.

Ch...

Read more: Chile's political crisis is another brutal legacy of long-dead dictator Pinochet

How rich people like Gordon Sondland buy their way to being US ambassadors – 4 questions answered

  • Written by Dennis Jett, Professor of International Affairs, Pennsylvania State University
Some positions attract more political appointments -- like those in Western Europe.Markus Pfaff/Shutterstock.com

In every other developed democratic country, the role of ambassador, with only very rare exceptions, is given to career diplomats who have spent decades learning the art of international relations.

In the U.S., however, many ambassadors...

Read more: How rich people like Gordon Sondland buy their way to being US ambassadors – 4 questions answered

What the battle over control of PG E means for US utility customers

  • Written by Theodore J. Kury, Director of Energy Studies, University of Florida
PG&E is the largest U.S. utility.AP Photo/Jeff Chiu

There’s a battle raging over the ownership of PG&E Corp., one of the nation’s largest utilities, with cities, hedge fund managers and even customers all in the running.

Growing liabilities over its role in several deadly wildfires in California forced the company to file for...

Read more: What the battle over control of PG E means for US utility customers

Tons of acorns? It must be a mast year

  • Written by Emily Moran, Assistant Professor of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of California, Merced
A mast year can be a squirrel's dream come true.Editor77/Shutterstock.com

If you have oak trees in your neighborhood, perhaps you’ve noticed that some years the ground is carpeted with their acorns, and some years there are hardly any. Biologists call this pattern, in which all the oak trees for miles around make either lots of acorns or...

Read more: Tons of acorns? It must be a mast year

More Articles ...

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  2. Proposed asylum fees are part of a bid to make immigrants to the US fund their own red tape
  3. The Democrats are running more female veterans for office than ever before – but can they win?
  4. Haiti protests summon spirit of the Haitian Revolution to condemn a president tainted by scandal
  5. How scientists are combating 'superbugs': 4 essential reads
  6. Cities and states take up the battle for an open internet
  7. Dwindling tropical rainforests mean lost medicines yet to be discovered in their plants
  8. How much credit should corporations get for the advancement of LGBTQ rights?
  9. Democratic candidates want to boost school funding – research shows that will help low-income students
  10. Urban unrest propels global wave of protests
  11. Is it ethical to keep pets and other animals? It depends on where you keep them
  12. Curious Kids: Why do people look into space with telescopes but not binoculars?
  13. Why telling people with diabetes to use Walmart insulin can be dangerous advice
  14. Impeachment: Two quotes that defined the first day of public hearings
  15. Climate change fueled the rise and demise of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, superpower of the ancient world
  16. Firearm-makers may finally decide it's in their interest to help reduce gun violence after Sandy Hook ruling
  17. What is a caliph? The Islamic State tries to boost its legitimacy by hijacking a historic institution
  18. House impeachment inquiry may help restore the political and social norms that Trump flouts
  19. How higher ed can deal with ethical questions over its disgraced donors
  20. Could the Hyde Amendment be repealed in 2020?
  21. Could the Federal government start paying for abortions after the 2020 elections?
  22. DACA argued at the Supreme Court: 6 essential reads
  23. DACA heads to the Supreme Court: 6 essential reads
  24. To stop police shootings of people with mental health disabilities, I asked them what cops – and everyone – could do to help
  25. What Ukrainians think about Trump and his 'quid pro quo' in 3 charts
  26. Ukrainians are divided over Trump's 'quid pro quo'
  27. Law-and-order or conspiracy? How political parties frame the impeachment battle will help decide Trump's fate
  28. Apollo 12: Fifty years ago, a passionate scientist's keen eye led to the first pinpoint landing on the Moon
  29. Can the Paris Agreement on climate change succeed without the US? 4 questions answered
  30. Data science could help Californians battle future wildfires
  31. Why tyranny could be the inevitable outcome of democracy
  32. 30 years after the Berlin Wall came down, East and West Germany are still divided
  33. How the US military has embraced growing religious diversity
  34. GI Bill opened doors to college for many vets, but politicians created a separate one for blacks
  35. Trump's charity woes are uncommon, if not unprecedented, and could get more costly
  36. Senators' silence suggests they may be taking their impeachment trial duty seriously
  37. The battle between NBC and CBS to be the first to film a Berlin Wall tunnel escape
  38. E-bikes are coming to federally owned trails: 4 questions answered
  39. Apple, Disney and Netflix's streaming battle isn't winner-take-all
  40. WTF? Slurs offend young adults more than swearing
  41. World's deadliest inventor: Mikhail Kalashnikov and his AK-47
  42. He was Trump before Trump: VP Spiro Agnew attacked the news media 50 years ago
  43. The forgotten mass destruction of Jewish homes during 'Kristallnacht'
  44. Emperor Penguins could march to extinction if nations fail to halt climate change
  45. Here's why colleges are being forced to close their doors - and what they can do to stay open
  46. Salad bars and water systems are easy targets for bioterrorists -- and America's monitoring system is woefully inadequate
  47. Soft robots of the future may depend on new materials that conduct electricity, sense damage and self-heal
  48. How Pete Buttigieg is reviving the pragmatic, progressive ideals of the Social Gospel movement
  49. Inequality is higher in some states like New York and Louisiana because of corporate welfare
  50. How do we know when a species at risk has recovered? It's not just a matter of numbers