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Why charter schools are not as 'public' as they claim to be

  • Written by Kevin Welner, Professor, Education Policy & Law; Director, National Education Policy Center, University of Colorado Boulder
imageCharter school enrollment reportedly grew 7% during the pandemic.FG Trade/E+ via Getty Images

Proponents of charter schools insist that they are public schools “open to all students.” But the truth is more nuanced. As an education policy researcher – and as author of a new book about charter schools I wrote with fellow researcher W...

Read more: Why charter schools are not as 'public' as they claim to be

Who pays and who benefits from a massive expansion of solar power?

  • Written by Felix Mormann, Professor of Law, Texas A&M University
imageAerial view of the 6-megawatt Stanton Solar Farm near Orlando, Fla.Paul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Electricity generation produces a quarter of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change. The electric grid also is highly vulnerable to climate change effects, such as more frequent and severe droughts, hurricanes an...

Read more: Who pays and who benefits from a massive expansion of solar power?

What happened during the last government shutdown: 4 essential reads

  • Written by Matt Williams, Breaking News Editor
imageRed sky at night, federal workers take fright? Mark Wilson/Getty Images

The U.S. is (once again) staring down the barrel of a government shutdown.

Barring progress on a spending bill to fund government agencies past Sept. 30, 2021 – and Democrats are busying themselves trying to get such a measure through Congress – federal workers...

Read more: What happened during the last government shutdown: 4 essential reads

SNAP benefits are rising for millions of Americans, thanks to a long-overdue 'Thrifty Food Plan' update

  • Written by Tracy Roof, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Richmond
imageBuying enough groceries with government benefits is getting easier.Katrina Wittkamp/DigitalVision via Getty Images

The U.S. Department of Agriculture adjusts Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program benefits to reflect changes in food prices once a year. The government agency will take two other factors into account when it increases those...

Read more: SNAP benefits are rising for millions of Americans, thanks to a long-overdue 'Thrifty Food Plan'...

The music of proteins is made audible through a computer program that learns from Chopin

  • Written by Peng Zhang, Postdoctoral Researcher in Computational Biology, The Rockefeller University
imageTraining an algorithm to play proteins like Chopin can produce more melodious songs.Frederic Chopin/Wikimedia Commons

With the right computer program, proteins become pleasant music.

There are many surprising analogies between proteins, the basic building blocks of life, and musical notation. These analogies can be used not only to help advance...

Read more: The music of proteins is made audible through a computer program that learns from Chopin

Combining an HIV vaccine with immunotherapy may reduce the need for daily medication

  • Written by Sheikh Abdul Rahman, Postdoctoral Fellow in Microbiology and Immunology, Emory University
imageThe estimated lifetime costs of antiretroviral therapy for someone who acquires HIV at age 35 is $358,380.YakubovAlim/iStock via Getty Images Plus

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

A new combination treatment for HIV can strengthen a patient’s immune response against the virus even after they stop...

Read more: Combining an HIV vaccine with immunotherapy may reduce the need for daily medication

Facebook sabe que Instagram está dañando la mente de los adolescentes... y decide callar

  • Written by Christia Spears Brown, Professor of Psychology, University of Kentucky
imageEl enfoque de Instagram en fotos filtradas de cuerpos daña la autoimagen de las jóvenes.Thomas Barwick/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Los funcionarios de Facebook realizaron una investigación interna en marzo de 2020 que mostraba que Instagram, la plataforma de redes sociales más utilizada por los adolescentes, es...

Read more: Facebook sabe que Instagram está dañando la mente de los adolescentes... y decide callar

Ancient Americans made art deep within the dark zones of caves throughout the Southeast

  • Written by Jan Simek, Professor of Anthropology, University of Tennessee
imageThe author examining pictographs in 60th Unnamed Cave, Tennessee.Alan Cressler

On a cold winter’s day in 1980, a group of recreational cavers entered a narrow, wet stream passage south of Knoxville, Tennessee. They navigated a slippery mud slope and a tight keyhole through the cave wall, trudged through the stream itself, ducked through...

Read more: Ancient Americans made art deep within the dark zones of caves throughout the Southeast

Avoiding water bankruptcy in the drought-troubled Southwest: What the US and Iran can learn from each other

  • Written by Mojtaba Sadegh, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, Boise State University
imageIn some drought-stricken parts of the Southwest, water arrives by truck.Spencer Platt/Getty Images

The 2021 water year ends on Sept. 30, and it was another hot, dry year in the western U.S., with almost the entire region in drought. Reservoirs vital for farms, communities and hydropower have fallen to dangerous lows.

The biggest blow came in August,...

Read more: Avoiding water bankruptcy in the drought-troubled Southwest: What the US and Iran can learn from...

An autonomous robot may have already killed people – here's how the weapons could be more destabilizing than nukes

  • Written by James Dawes, Professor of English, Macalester College
imageThe term 'killer robot' often conjures images of Terminator-like humanoid robots. Militaries around the world are working on autonomous machines that are less scary looking but no less lethal.John F. Williams/U.S. Navy

Autonomous weapon systems – commonly known as killer robots – may have killed human beings for the first time ever last...

Read more: An autonomous robot may have already killed people – here's how the weapons could be more...

More Articles ...

  1. New NCAA endorsement rules could benefit women more than men
  2. Francis Scott Key: One of the anti-slavery movement's great villains
  3. Walt Disney's radical vision for a new kind of city
  4. Why Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg may be in hot water with the SEC
  5. The Supreme Court's immense power may pose a danger to its legitimacy
  6. R. Kelly was aided by a network of complicity – common in workplace abuse – that enabled crimes to go on for decades
  7. Trillions in infrastructure spending could mean hundreds of billions in fraud
  8. Social media gives support to LGBTQ youth when in-person communities are lacking
  9. Could Apple's child safety feature backfire? New research shows warnings can increase risky sharing
  10. Looking for transformative travel? Keep these six stages in mind
  11. 'The Activist' reality TV show sparked furor, but treating causes as commodities with help from celebrities happens all the time
  12. Can healthy people who eat right and exercise skip the COVID-19 vaccine? A research scientist and fitness enthusiast explains why the answer is no
  13. How better funding can increase the number and diversity of doctoral students
  14. More guns, pandemic stress and a police legitimacy crisis created perfect conditions for homicide spike in 2020
  15. How Sen. Joe Manchin's support for natural gas could derail Biden's US climate plan
  16. What Ötzi the prehistoric iceman can teach us about the use of tattoos in ceremonial healing or religious rites
  17. Should teens taking ADHD, anxiety and depression drugs consume energy drinks and coffee?
  18. Mexican communities manage their local forests, generating benefits for humans, trees and wildlife
  19. Big fires demand a big response: How 1910's Big Burn can help us think smarter about fighting wildfires and living with fire
  20. How civil rights activist Howard Fuller became a devout champion of school choice
  21. How lawyers could prevent America's eviction crisis from getting a whole lot worse
  22. New Johnson Johnson data shows second shot boosts antibodies and protection against COVID-19 – but one dose is still strong against delta variant
  23. Tense decision-making as CDC joins FDA in recommending Pfizer booster shot for 65 up, people at high risk and those with occupational exposure to COVID-19
  24. What goes into a disaster kit and go-bag? Here's a checklist for everything from hurricanes to wildfires and other storms
  25. What goes into a disaster kit and go-bag? Here's a checklist for wildfires, hurricanes and other storms
  26. Fall is prime hurricane and wildfire season: Are your disaster kit and go-bag ready?
  27. Haitian migrants at the border: An asylum law scholar explains how US skirts its legal and moral duties
  28. Preliminary research finds that even mild cases of COVID-19 leave a mark on the brain – but it's not yet clear how long it lasts
  29. Federal police reform talks have failed – but local efforts stand a better chance of success
  30. Long power outages after disasters aren't inevitable – but to avoid them, utilities need to think differently
  31. What Harvard’s humanist chaplain shows about atheism in America
  32. How conservative comic Greg Gutfeld overtook Stephen Colbert in ratings to become the most popular late-night TV host
  33. School year off to a rocky start? 4 ways parents can help kids get back on track
  34. How a team of musicologists and computer scientists completed Beethoven's unfinished 10th Symphony
  35. Half of unvaccinated workers say they'd rather quit than get a shot – but real-world data suggest few are following through
  36. More Americans couldn't get enough to eat in 2020 – a change that hit the middle class hardest
  37. Some rich people will love at least one sweetener in Democrats' $3.5 trillion plan
  38. 20 years after 9/11, the men charged with responsibility are still waiting for trial – here's why
  39. How the world's biggest Islamic organization drives religious reform in Indonesia – and seeks to influence the Muslim world
  40. Colleges must choose whether to let athletes wear school gear for paid promotions
  41. 21 million Americans say Biden is 'illegitimate' and Trump should be restored by violence, survey finds
  42. Changing your mind about something as important as vaccination isn't a sign of weakness – being open to new information is the smart way to make choices
  43. Rich kids and poor kids face different rules when it comes to bringing personal items to school
  44. Arctic sea ice hits its minimum extent for the year – 2 NASA scientists explain what's driving the overall decline
  45. Harvard's decision to ditch fossil fuel investments reflects changing financial realities and its climate change stance
  46. Combatting an invisible killer: New WHO air pollution guidelines recommend sharply lower limits
  47. Female leaders in higher education have created more inclusive and open institutions – here are 3 key figures
  48. Your driver-assist system may be out of alignment... with your understanding of how it works
  49. Psychological 'specialness spirals' can make ordinary items feel like treasures – and may explain how clutter accumulates
  50. Therapy dogs help students cope with the stress of college life