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Starting college? Here's why you should think about a gap year

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat's the evidence on a gap year?City Year, CC BY-NC-ND

Malia Obama recently announced that she will take a gap year before attending Harvard University. Historically, American high school graduates have been less likely to take a gap year as compared to their European and Australian counterparts.

A study of “The American Freshman,” for...

Read more: Starting college? Here's why you should think about a gap year

Restoring the Everglades will benefit both humans and nature

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFlock of ibis, Everglades National Park.Linda Friar, National Park Service/Flickr

Everglades National Park (ENP) is our only national wetland park, and one of the largest aquascapes in the world. Perhaps more than any other U.S. national park, ENP’s treasures are hard to defend. Lying at the southern end of an immense watershed the size of...

Read more: Restoring the Everglades will benefit both humans and nature

Does billionaire-funded lawsuit against Gawker create playbook for punishing press?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Word last week that Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel bankrolled wrestler Hulk Hogan’s invasion-of-privacy lawsuit against Gawker added a wrinkle to a case already featuring colorful characters and a US$140 million jury verdict.

At a sensational and personal level, the story highlights the animus between PayPal co-founder Thiel and...

Read more: Does billionaire-funded lawsuit against Gawker create playbook for punishing press?

The trillion dollar question Obama left unanswered in Hiroshima

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

As it seeks to modernize its nuclear arsenal, the United States faces a big choice, one which Barack Obama failed to mention during his moving Hiroshima speech on May 27.

Should we spend a trillion dollars to replace each of our thousands of nuclear warheads with a more sophisticated substitute attached to a more lethal delivery system? Or should...

Read more: The trillion dollar question Obama left unanswered in Hiroshima

Facial expressions are key to first impressions. What does that mean for people with facial paralysis?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFacial expressions may be a universal language. Where does that leave people with facial paralysis?Icerko Lýdia via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY

Facial expressions are important parts of how we communicate and how we develop impressions of the people around us. In “The Expression of Emotion in Man and Animals,” Charles Darwin...

Read more: Facial expressions are key to first impressions. What does that mean for people with facial...

Iran's Rouhani may now control parliament, but do his economic reforms stand a chance?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani and his policies are set to get a boost this week after voters elected a parliament that favors reform.

While Rouhani’s reformists didn’t win a majority of seats, it appears likely that the “moderate” independents also elected will side with his faction, giving the reformists an effective...

Read more: Iran's Rouhani may now control parliament, but do his economic reforms stand a chance?

Recreating forests of the past isn't enough to fix our wildfire problems

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWildfires are getting bigger and more costly. Can we return them to a less dangerous state by looking to the past? U.S. Department of Agriculture, CC BY

Tiger, tiger, burning bright

In the forests of the night…

-William Blake

There is general agreement that America’s landscapes, certainly its wildlands, are out of whack with their fires....

Read more: Recreating forests of the past isn't enough to fix our wildfire problems

Is a tuition-free policy enough to ensure college success?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat do the most disadvantaged students need for college success?Commencement image via www.shutterstock.com

Across the U.S., many soon-to-be high school graduates are excited to begin college. Over the past decades, rates of college enrollment have increased. In 1950, only 16 percent of young people had at least some college exposure. By 2012,...

Read more: Is a tuition-free policy enough to ensure college success?

More Articles ...

  1. How did public bathrooms get to be separated by sex in the first place?
  2. Impeachment, culture wars and the politics of identity in Brazil
  3. Obama's Asia trip highlights flagging fate of TPP trade deal
  4. Trump's higher ed proposals could leave poor students out of college
  5. The future of personal satellite technology is here – are we ready for it?
  6. Improving patient care by bridging the divide between doctors and data scientists
  7. Which Facebook 'friends' can help you land a job?
  8. How nanotechnology can help us grow more food using less energy and water
  9. After the rediscovery of a 19th-century novel, our view of black female writers is transformed
  10. A trip to be remembered: Obama in Japan and Vietnam
  11. Want to lose weight? Train the brain, not the body
  12. What does it mean for researchers, journalists and the public when secrecy surrounds science?
  13. Why do only some people get 'skin orgasms' from listening to music?
  14. The trillion dollar question nobody is asking the presidential candidates
  15. Worried about arsenic in your baby's rice cereal? There are other foods that can provide essential iron
  16. New political divide on both sides of Atlantic: populists v cosmopolitans
  17. Deciphering the mysterious decline of honey bees
  18. The hefty price of 'study drug' misuse on college campuses
  19. Troubled waters: conflict in the South China Sea explained
  20. We need to know the algorithms the government uses to make important decisions about us
  21. Touch creates a healing bond in health care
  22. Transgender Americans
  23. Obama's trip to Vietnam and Japan isn't just a friendly visit
  24. It's easier to defend against ransomware than you might think
  25. Could a tweet or a text increase college enrollment or student achievement?
  26. Wildfires in West have gotten bigger, more frequent and longer since the 1980s
  27. Why we need better ways to cut greenhouse gases from agriculture
  28. Why trans rights nationwide are only a matter of time
  29. Are the high-rolling quants of horse racing our friends or foes?
  30. Is commercial aviation as safe and secure as we're told?
  31. Kennewick Man will be reburied, but quandaries around human remains won't
  32. Family matters: how video games help successful aging
  33. What happens when middle schoolers take to Twitter? They become learners
  34. Can being a good storyteller lead to love?
  35. Catching metastatic cancer cells before they grow into tumors: a new implant shows promise
  36. The paradox of peak-based ozone air pollution standards
  37. HIV 'test and treat' strategy can save lives -- but it needs to be easier for patients to start treatment
  38. What Rousseff's impeachment means for Brazil's struggling millions
  39. Trump and Clinton want to bring back millions of outsourced jobs – here's why they can't
  40. Chinese philosophy is missing from U.S. philosophy departments. Should we care?
  41. New overtime rule will give economy a boost, but 'ossified' labor law still needs fixing
  42. A tale of two oil and gas boomtowns – a boost to the economy, a tricky landing
  43. Hand washing stops infections, so why do health care workers skip it?
  44. Securing web browsing: protecting the Tor network
  45. Could the mystery of the meow actually be solved by a new talking cat collar?
  46. Sexual harassment compromises graduate students' safety
  47. European data suggests the gig economy helped create Trump, Sanders
  48. New report on GE crops avoids simple answers -- and that's the point, study members say
  49. Why the effects of 2016 El Niño trumped climate change in the Alberta wildfires
  50. Why the history of news explains its future