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How technology could be a solution to caregiver shortage for seniors

  • Written by Deborah Vollmer Dahlke, Adjunct Associate Professor, Texas A&M University
Seniors are embracing technology as a means of improving their health.Rocketclips, Inc./Shutterstock.com

Young people may roll their eyes at older people who can’t use technology as fast as they do, but it’s wrong to say that older Americans can’t use technology. Remember, a baby boomer, Tim Berners-Lee, invented the World Wide Web...

Read more: How technology could be a solution to caregiver shortage for seniors

How college towns could benefit more from throngs of student volunteers

  • Written by Jennifer A. Jones, Assistant Professor of Nonprofit Management and Leadership, University of Florida
Pitching in. Olesya Kuznetsova/Shutterstock.com

Millions of college students volunteer at soup kitchens, animal shelters and other nonprofits near where they go to school. The arrangement gives these young adults valuable experience that can help them launch their careers while giving charities a hand.

As a professor who studies nonprofits,...

Read more: How college towns could benefit more from throngs of student volunteers

The internet is rotting – let's embrace it

  • Written by Viktor Mayer-Schönberger, Professor of Internet Governance and Regulation, University of Oxford
How can you forget when the internet won't let you?vchal/shutterstock.com

I have just taken an entire website and gigabytes of data offline. It covered a highly successful series of conferences on the data economy. It brought together thought leaders and key decision-makers from around the world for annual retreats – over a decade ago. And...

Read more: The internet is rotting – let's embrace it

The Mueller hearing and the death of facts

  • Written by Lee McIntyre, Research Fellow Center for Philosophy and History of Science, Boston University

Listening to former special counsel Robert Mueller’s testimony on July 24, the nation heard a duel over the facts.

Not what the facts imply, not our response to them, but what the facts are.

Founding Father John Adams once said, “Facts are stubborn things; and whatever may be our wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our...

Read more: The Mueller hearing and the death of facts

Webcams in nursing home rooms may deter elder abuse – but are they ethical?

  • Written by Clara Berridge, Assistant Professor, School of Social Work, University of Washington

Mary Ann Papp’s daughter Lisa was worried about her 75-year-old mother.

A foot infection seemed to be going untreated, leading Lisa to fear that her mother’s nursing home wasn’t providing proper care.

So Lisa did what any concerned child might: She bought a US$199 webcam from Target and put it in her mother’s room.

But she...

Read more: Webcams in nursing home rooms may deter elder abuse – but are they ethical?

What in the world is a slime eel?

  • Written by Nicola Di Girolamo, Associate Professor of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Oklahoma State University
Researchers pour a barrel of hagfish into a holding tank aboard a research vessel about 20 miles off the coast of Portsmouth, New Hampshire.AP/Steven Senne

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.


What is a slime eel? - Minti F.,...

Read more: What in the world is a slime eel?

Investors, consumers and workers are changing capitalism for the better by demanding companies behave more responsibly

  • Written by Elizabeth Schmidt, Professor of Practice, Nonprofit Organizations; Social & Environmental Enterprises, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Capitalism’s days may be numbered – at least judging by recent polls.

A majority of millennials reject the economic system, while 55% of women aged 18 to 54 say they prefer socialism. More Democrats now have a positive view of socialism than capitalism.

One problem interpreting numbers like these is that there are many definitions of...

Read more: Investors, consumers and workers are changing capitalism for the better by demanding companies...

US health care: An industry too big to fail

  • Written by Michael Williams, Associate Chief Medical Officer for Clinical Integration; Associate Professor of Surgery and Director of the UVA Center for Health Policy, University of Virginia

As I spoke recently with colleagues at a conference in Florence, Italy about health care innovation, a fundamental truth resurfaced in my mind: the U.S. health care industry is just that. An industry, an economic force, Big Business, first and foremost. It is a vehicle for returns on investment and the success of our society second.

This is...

Read more: US health care: An industry too big to fail

The Supreme Court decision that kept suburban schools segregated

  • Written by Jon Hale, Associate Professor of Education, University of South Carolina
A 1974 Supreme Court decision found that school segregation was allowable if it wasn't being done on purpose.AP

America recently marked the 65-year anniversary of the Supreme Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education – a landmark case intended to abolish the “separate-but-equal” doctrine of racial segregation in...

Read more: The Supreme Court decision that kept suburban schools segregated

Facebook algorithm changes suppressed journalism and meddled with democracy

  • Written by Jennifer Grygiel, Assistant Professor of Communications (Social Media) & Magazine, News and Digital Journalism, Syracuse University
How do you feel about Facebook?fyv6561/Shutterstock.com

Facebook’s News Feed algorithm determines what users see on its platform – from funny memes to comments from friends. The company regularlyupdates this algorithm, which can dramatically change what information people consume.

As the 2020 election approaches, there is much public...

Read more: Facebook algorithm changes suppressed journalism and meddled with democracy

More Articles ...

  1. Is Boris Johnson, Britain's new prime minister, anti-immigrant, a homophobe, a bigot – or just politically expedient?
  2. Without school, a 'lost generation' of Rohingya refugee children face uncertain future
  3. Resource depletion is a serious problem, but 'footprint' estimates don't tell us much about it
  4. Why are Atlantic and Gulf coast property owners building back bigger after hurricanes?
  5. Heart transplant doctors could help more people by accepting donations from the obese
  6. 5 ways to protect yourself from cybercrime
  7. How fireflies glow – and what signals they're sending
  8. Our database of police officers who shoot citizens reveals who's most likely to shoot
  9. Micro-naps for plants: Flicking the lights on and off can save energy without hurting indoor agriculture harvests
  10. 'Avengers: Endgame' is nowhere near the worldwide box office record – here's why
  11. Why does the US sentence people to hundreds of years in prison?
  12. Asylum restrictions: The president can enforce the law, but can't change it
  13. Waiting for an undersea robot in Antarctica to call home
  14. Could a tax on stock trades pay off the nation's student debt?
  15. What's really behind baseball's home run surge?
  16. What is at stake in the Strait of Hormuz?
  17. Smokey (the) Bear is still keeping his watchful eye on America's forests after 75 years on the job
  18. What Amazon's decision to retrain a third of its employees means for the future of work
  19. Curious Kids: Why do birds sing?
  20. Why do birds sing?
  21. Yes, I'm searching for aliens – and no, I won't be going to Area 51 to look for them
  22. Brain-machine interfaces are getting better and better – and Neuralink's new brain implant pushes the pace
  23. Are Syrian refugees a danger to the West?
  24. What school segregation looks like in the US today, in 4 charts
  25. Cartel kingpin El Chapo is jailed for life, but the US-Mexico drug trade is booming
  26. Adapting cities to a hotter world: 3 essential reads
  27. Heat stroke: A doctor offers tips to stay safe as temperatures soar
  28. Why the federal government isn't prosecuting the officer who choked Eric Garner
  29. Washington state's big bet on 'free college'
  30. Better design could make mobile devices easier for seniors to use
  31. The dysfunctional debt ceiling and why we should kill it: 5 questions answered
  32. A giant leap for humankind -- future Moon missions will include diverse astronauts and more partners
  33. Home birth may start babies off with health-promoting microbes
  34. How the Volkswagen Beetle sparked America's art car movement
  35. Justice Stevens, Babe Ruth and the best law clerk assignment ever
  36. Voices from an age of uncertain work – Americans miss stability and a shared sense of purpose in their jobs
  37. Trump wasn't the first president to confront the Supreme Court – and back down
  38. Robert Hooke: The 'English Leonardo' who was a 17th-century scientific superstar
  39. 5 things parents need to know about 'summer loss'
  40. Counting 11 million undocumented immigrants is easier than Trump thinks
  41. How immigrants give American companies a powerful boost against Chinese rivals
  42. Can protecting land promote employment? In New England, the answer is yes
  43. The Bible says to welcome refugees
  44. 3 myths to bust about breaking up 'big tech'
  45. Americans focus on responding to earthquake damage, not preventing it, because they're unaware of their risk
  46. Did we mishear Neil Armstrong's famous first words on the Moon?
  47. As flood risks increase across the US, it's time to recognize the limits of levees
  48. War's physical toll can last for generations, as it has for the children of the Vietnam War
  49. When migrants go home, they bring back money, skills and ideas that can change a country
  50. Young Americans deserve a 21st-century Moonshot to Mars