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The Conversation

How Connecticut's schools have managed to maintain lunch distribution for kids who need it most during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • Written by Marlene B. Schwartz, Professor of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Connecticut
imageWhen they moved instruction online, many schools began distributing grab-and-go lunches.AP Photo/Lynne Sladky

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

The big idea

Connecticut schools ensured that low-income students were still getting enough to eat after the pandemic first shuttered buildings in March because of a swift...

Read more: How Connecticut's schools have managed to maintain lunch distribution for kids who need it most...

3 ways Black people say their white co-workers and managers can support them and be an antidote to systemic racism

  • Written by Jennifer R. Joe, Professor of Accounting, University of Delaware
imagePeople of color say they want office allies who offer honest feedback.10'000 Hours/DigitalVision via Getty Images

President Joe Biden committed the U.S. government to racial equity by issuing four executive orders on Jan. 26 that seek to curb systemic racism. In the orders, he cited the killing of George Floyd in 2020, which sparked months of...

Read more: 3 ways Black people say their white co-workers and managers can support them and be an antidote to...

Strong political institutions can uphold democracy, even if people can't agree on politics

  • Written by Joseph Daniel Ura, Professor of Political Science, Texas A&M University
imagePro-Trump rioters trying to enter Capitol building. A recent poll showed that up to one-fifth of Americans supported the assault on the Capitol.Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

Americans’ trust in the federal government has declined steadily in the last half-century, polls show.

The 2020 presidential election did little to...

Read more: Strong political institutions can uphold democracy, even if people can't agree on politics

No, you are not addicted to your digital device, but you may have a habit you want to break

  • Written by Ian A. Anderson, Ph.D. Student, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageFrequent social media use does not necessarily equate to addiction.Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Imagine that you’re a typical middle school student having dinner with your family. Your mother takes your smartphone away and puts it in a lock-box that won’t open for an hour.

Would you: (a) go ahead and eat dinner with your...

Read more: No, you are not addicted to your digital device, but you may have a habit you want to break

How can I get the COVID-19 vaccine? Here's what you need to know and which state strategies are working

  • Written by Steven W. Chen, Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs, University of Southern California
imageGetting vaccinated often means pre-registering, then registering, then arranging an appointment and standing in line.Mario Tama/Getty Images

For many people, trying to get the COVID-19 vaccine has been a lesson in frustration. The vaccine supply is limited in many areas, creating confusion over who can get a first and sometimes second dose of...

Read more: How can I get the COVID-19 vaccine? Here's what you need to know and which state strategies are...

Why rituals are important survival tools during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • Written by Cristine H Legare, Professor of Psychology, The University of Texas at Austin College of Liberal Arts
imageRituals like hand-washing help spread hygiene practices that are essential to health and survival.Aditya Saputra/INA Photo Agency/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

COVID-19 has disrupted many aspects of daily life, including rituals both sacred and mundane. At the same time, the pandemic has opened a unique opportunity globally to adapt...

Read more: Why rituals are important survival tools during the COVID-19 pandemic

Israel faces legal – and practical – obligations for including Palestinians in vaccine success

  • Written by Yara M. Asi, Post-Doctoral Scholar, Health Management and Informatics, University of Central Florida
imagePalestinian patients infected with COVID-19 registering at an emergency unit in the West Bank city of Ramallah.AP Photo/Nasser Nasser

As nations scramble to vaccinate populations against COVID-19, one country has been ahead of the rest: Israel.

By late January, Israel had vaccinated more than 30% of its population – more than double or triple...

Read more: Israel faces legal – and practical – obligations for including Palestinians in vaccine success

People may become less likely to contribute to a virtual public good like Wikipedia or Waze if they know many others are already doing it

  • Written by Anjana Susarla, Omura-Saxena Professor of Responsible AI, Michigan State University
imageWaze depends on users to voluntarily upload information about traffic accidents and road closures. Linda Davidson/The Washington Post via Getty Images

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

The big idea

While people tend to contribute more to a virtual public good if they see others doing the same, this effect reverses if...

Read more: People may become less likely to contribute to a virtual public good like Wikipedia or Waze if...

Could a human enter a black hole to study it?

  • Written by Leo Rodriguez, Assistant Professor of Physics, Grinnell College
imageA person falling into a black hole and being stretched while approaching the black hole's horizon.Leo Rodriguez and Shanshan Rodriguez, CC BY-NDimage

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.


Could a human enter a black hole to study it?...

Read more: Could a human enter a black hole to study it?

Navalny returns to Russia and brings anti-Putin politics with him

  • Written by Regina Smyth, Professor of Political Science, Indiana University
imageProtesters oppose riot police during a rally in support of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny on January 31, 2021 in Moscow, Russia. Oleg Nikishin/Getty Images

Russian opposition leader Aleksei Navalny and his team have stunned the Russian government again, forcing President Vladimir Putin and his allies to confront significant protest led...

Read more: Navalny returns to Russia and brings anti-Putin politics with him

More Articles ...

  1. Stuck inside your home this Groundhog Day? Be like Phil the weatherman, and try some mindfulness
  2. Social accounting includes looking beyond the bare numbers of racial diversity
  3. Congress could use an arcane section of the 14th Amendment to hold Trump accountable for Capitol attack
  4. What those mourning the fragility of American democracy get wrong
  5. Espionage attempts like the SolarWinds hack are inevitable, so it's safer to focus on defense – not retaliation
  6. How age diversity in a presidential Cabinet could affect policies and programs
  7. To make less-harmful road salts, we're studying natural antifreezes produced by fish
  8. As scientists turn their attention to COVID-19, other research is not getting done – and that can have lasting consequences
  9. 10 parenting strategies to reduce your kids' pandemic stress
  10. Teaching about pandemics and inequality while living through those realities
  11. Don't blame Fox News for the attack on the Capitol
  12. Anosmia, the loss of smell caused by COVID-19, doesn't always go away quickly – but smell training may help
  13. Why GameStop shares stopped trading: 5 questions answered
  14. Weed withdrawal: More than half of people using medical cannabis for pain experience withdrawal symptoms
  15. Trump wasn't the first president to try to politicize the civil service – which remains at risk of returning to Jackson's 'spoils system'
  16. COVID-19 misinformation on Chinese social media – lessons for countering conspiracy theories
  17. Why using fear to promote COVID-19 vaccination and mask wearing could backfire
  18. To make the US auto fleet greener, increasing fuel efficiency matters more than selling electric vehicles
  19. Thawing permafrost is full of ice-forming particles that could get into atmosphere
  20. Travelers coming from Italy may have driven first US COVID-19 wave more than those from China, study suggests
  21. Why it takes 2 shots to make mRNA vaccines do their antibody-creating best – and what the data shows on delaying the booster dose
  22. A universal influenza vaccine may be one step closer, bringing long-lasting protection against flu
  23. Why the next major hurdle to ending the pandemic will be about persuading people to get vaccinated
  24. Can Biden fix the vaccine mess? An expert says yes
  25. 5 websites to help educate about the horrors of the Holocaust
  26. Biden faces the world: 5 foreign policy experts explain US priorities – and problems – after Trump
  27. People take better care of public places when they feel like they have a stake in them
  28. Expert in fluid dynamics explains how to reduce the risk of COVID-19 airborne transmission inside a car
  29. The problem with India's 'love jihad' laws
  30. Death threats and intimidation of public officials signal Trump's autocratic legacy
  31. Intense scrutiny of Chinese-born researchers in the US threatens innovation
  32. What is an executive order, and why don't presidents use them all the time?
  33. How new voters and Black women transformed Georgia's politics
  34. Incitement to violence is rarely explicit – here are some techniques people use to breed hate
  35. Beetle parents manipulate information broadcast from bacteria in a rotting corpse
  36. How Biden's dogs could make the Oval Office a workplace with less stress and better decision-making
  37. Think US evangelicals are dying out? Well, define evangelicalism ...
  38. Feeling relatively poor increases support for women in the workplace – but men still don't want them making household decisions
  39. TikTok's sea chanteys – how life under the pandemic has mirrored months at sea
  40. The body's fight against COVID-19 explained using 3D-printed models
  41. Harriet Tubman: Biden revives plan to put a Black woman of faith on the $20 bill
  42. Women's health is better when women have more control in their society
  43. Why COVID-19 won't kill cities
  44. Yes, customers do like it when waiters and hairdressers wear a mask – especially if it's black
  45. Biden has pledged to advance environmental justice – here's how the EPA can start
  46. Rural health care is in crisis – here are 5 innovative ways Biden can help it transform
  47. Your corner pharmacy – joining the front lines of the COVID-19 fight
  48. How history textbooks will deal with the US Capitol attack
  49. Strange costumes of Capitol rioters echo the early days of the Ku Klux Klan - before the white sheets
  50. Why does it take longer to fly from east to west on an airplane?