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The Conversation

Do I need a booster shot if I got the Johnson Johnson vaccine? A virologist answers 5 questions

  • Written by Maureen Ferran, Associate Professor of Biology, Rochester Institute of Technology
imageA little more than 8% of vaccinated people in the U.S. have received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. SOPA Images/Contributor/Light Rocket via Getty Images

For people who received the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine, the past few months have been a bit of a bumpy ride with news of side effects, pauses and restarts and now boosters. Maureen...

Read more: Do I need a booster shot if I got the Johnson Johnson vaccine? A virologist answers 5 questions

Vaccines could affect how the coronavirus evolves - but that's no reason to skip your shot

  • Written by Andrew Read, Professor of Biology, Entomology and Biotechnology, Penn State
imageVaccines against COVID-19 are the safest – and fastest – way to prevent the spread of variants.Luis Alvarez/ DigitalVision via Getty Images

Takeaways

  • A 2015 paper on a chicken virus showed vaccines could enable more deadly variants to spread – in chickens.

  • But that outcome is rare. Only a minority of human and animal vaccines have...

Read more: Vaccines could affect how the coronavirus evolves - but that's no reason to skip your shot

What is ISIS-K? Two terrorism experts on the group behind the deadly Kabul airport attack and its rivalry with the Taliban

  • Written by Amira Jadoon, Assistant Professor at the Combating Terrorism Center, United States Military Academy West Point
imageISIS-K, an affiliate of the Islamic State group, has claimed responsibility for the Kabul terrorist attack.Wakil Kohsar/AFP/Getty Images

An attack on a crowd gathered outside Kabul’s airport on Aug. 26, 2021, has left at least 100 people dead, including at least 13 U.S. troops. ISIS-K claimed responsibility for the coordinated suicide bomb...

Read more: What is ISIS-K? Two terrorism experts on the group behind the deadly Kabul airport attack and its...

Racial income and wealth gaps are huge – but the Fed doesn't have the right tools to fix them

  • Written by Paul Wachtel, Emeritus Professor of Economics, New York University
imageDoes Fed Chair Jerome Powell have the tools to tackle racial disparities?AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

Central bankers and economists from around the world are convening remotely for the annual Jackson Hole symposium on Aug. 27, 2021, to discuss the future of monetary policy.

For the second year in a row, the annual conference will be virtual and the...

Read more: Racial income and wealth gaps are huge – but the Fed doesn't have the right tools to fix them

American religious groups have a history of resettling refugees – including Afghans

  • Written by Stephanie J. Nawyn, Associate Professor of Sociology and Co-Director of the Center for Gender in Global Context, Michigan State University
imageMany of the organizations helping refugees resettle are faith-based groups.AP Photo/Airman 1st Class Kylie Barrow

Since the Taliban took control of Afghanistan’s capital, Kabul, on Aug. 15, 2021, there has been a frenetic evacuation of foreigners and Afghan nationals. Thousands of these Afghans assisted the United States government, which now...

Read more: American religious groups have a history of resettling refugees – including Afghans

Do star athletes who want to play for the NBA really need college? What LaMelo Ball got right – and wrong – about why they don't

  • Written by John Holden, Assistant Professor of Legal Studies, Oklahoma State University
imageNBA star LaMelo Ball stirred controversy recently with comments that school doesn't hold much value for superstar athletes.Kevin Mazur

In a recent interview published in GQ, NBA star LaMelo Ball downplayed the importance of college for athletes who aspire to play professional basketball. When asked about his decision to forgo college and play...

Read more: Do star athletes who want to play for the NBA really need college? What LaMelo Ball got right –...

Why students learn better when they move their bodies – instead of sitting still at their desks

  • Written by Katie Headrick Taylor, Associate Professor of Learning Sciences and Human Development, University of Washington
imageWhen our bodies are moving, our minds are more open to learning. Petri Oeschger/Moment Collection via Getty Images

My son’s kindergarten teachers, holding class on Zoom last year, instructed: “Eyes watching, ears listening, voices quiet, bodies still.” However, I noticed my 6-year-old’s hands would stay busy with items found...

Read more: Why students learn better when they move their bodies – instead of sitting still at their desks

These 3 energy storage technologies can help solve the challenge of moving to 100% renewable electricity

  • Written by Kerry Rippy, Researcher, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
imageEnergy storage can make facilities like this solar farm in Oxford, Maine, more profitable by letting them store power for cloudy days.AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty

In recent decades the cost of wind and solar power generation has dropped dramatically. This is one reason that the U.S. Department of Energy projects that renewable energy will be the fastes...

Read more: These 3 energy storage technologies can help solve the challenge of moving to 100% renewable...

7 tips for LGBTQ parents to help schools fight stigma and ignorance

  • Written by Abbie E. Goldberg, Professor of Psychology, Clark University
imageParents may want to talk to teachers about their family structure, and what their child calls each parent, before the start of the school year. Attila Csaszar/Moment Collection via Getty Images

Many parents want to ensure that their kids are in classrooms where they and their families are respected and embraced. However, as a psychologist and...

Read more: 7 tips for LGBTQ parents to help schools fight stigma and ignorance

The history of the Taliban is crucial in understanding their success now – and also what might happen next

  • Written by Ali A. Olomi, Assistant Professor of History, Penn State
imageThe Taliban came to the fore during Afghanistan's civil war that followed the Soviet pullout of 1989. Robert Nickelsberg/Getty Images

The rapid takeover of Afghanistan by the Taliban left many surprised. To Ali Olomi, a historian of the Middle East and Islam at Penn State University, a key to understanding what is happening now – and what...

Read more: The history of the Taliban is crucial in understanding their success now – and also what might...

More Articles ...

  1. Scientists are using new satellite tech to find glow-in-the-dark milky seas of maritime lore
  2. Specialized cells maintain healthy pregnancy by teaching the mother's immune system not to attack developing fetus
  3. Russia's COVID-19 response slowed by population reluctant to take domestic vaccine
  4. Pregnant or worried about infertility? Get vaccinated against COVID-19
  5. Is climate change to blame for extreme weather events? Attribution science says yes, for some – here's how it works
  6. Taliban's religious ideology – Deobandi Islam – has roots in colonial India
  7. Can student loans be cleared through bankruptcy? 4 questions answered
  8. Unverified reports of vaccine side effects in VAERS aren't the smoking guns portrayed by right-wing media outlets – they can offer insight into vaccine hesitancy
  9. What's a major donor? A fundraising expert explains
  10. Why people feel guilty about using effort-saving products when taking care of loved ones
  11. Presidents declare more disasters during reelection years – and the decisions come faster
  12. I studied people who think leisure is a waste of time – here's what I found
  13. How Rolling Stones drummer Charlie Watts infused one of the greatest rock 'n' roll bands with a little jazz
  14. COVID-19 has spurred investments in air filtration for K-12 schools – but these technologies aren't an instant fix
  15. ANZUS at 70: Together for decades, US, Australia, New Zealand now face different challenges from China
  16. Safety net policies are helping reduce the number of Americans below the poverty line – but that's not the whole story
  17. Students from struggling economic backgrounds sent home with food for the weekend have improved test scores, study finds
  18. Black parents say their children are being suspended for petty reasons that force them to take off from work and sometimes lose their jobs
  19. Corporate directors don't see stopping wayward CEOs as their job – contrary to popular belief
  20. India and Pakistan fought 3 wars over Kashmir – here's why international law and US help can't solve this territorial dispute
  21. The EPA is banning chlorpyrifos, a pesticide widely used on food crops, after 14 years of pressure from environmental and labor groups
  22. In 'Rumors,' Lizzo and Cardi B pull from the ancient Greeks, putting a new twist on an old tradition
  23. The fertility industry is poorly regulated – and would-be parents can lose out on having children as a result
  24. How would planting 8 billion trees every year for 20 years affect Earth's climate?
  25. Why the feds are investigating Tesla's Autopilot and what that means for the future of self-driving cars
  26. Italy – once overwhelmed by COVID-19 – turns to a health pass and stricter measures to contain virus
  27. Poison or cure? Traditional Chinese medicine shows that context can make all the difference
  28. Where do Afghanistan's refugees go?
  29. Climate change is an infrastructure problem – map of electric vehicle chargers shows one reason why
  30. How a vial of Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine travels from a lab in Missouri to an arm in Bangladesh
  31. Students are returning to school with anxiety, grief and gaps in social skills – will there be enough school mental health resources?
  32. Opioid lawsuit payout plans overlook a vital need: Pain management care and research focused on smarter use of addictive drugs
  33. After India's brutal coronavirus wave, two-thirds of population has been exposed to SARS-CoV2
  34. Hospitals often outsource important services to companies that prioritize profit over patients
  35. How photography can build peace and justice in war-torn communities
  36. Afghan troops sought safety in numbers – igniting a cascade of surrender
  37. What a baker from ancient Pompeii can teach us about happiness
  38. Immunocompromised people make up nearly half of COVID-19 breakthrough hospitalizations – an extra vaccine dose may help
  39. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  40. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  41. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  42. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  43. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  44. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  45. Answers to The Conversation's news quiz
  46. Bat pups babble and bat moms use baby talk, hinting at the evolution of human language
  47. Who has the power to say kids do or don't have to wear masks in school – the governor or the school district? It's not clear
  48. What the 'Lyme wars' can teach us about COVID-19 and how to find common ground in the school reopening debate
  49. Lesson from a robot swarm: Change group behavior by talking one-on-one rather than getting on a soapbox
  50. When hotter and drier means more – but eventually less – wildfire