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Why elite colleges should use a lottery to admit students

  • Written by Natasha Warikoo, Associate Professor of Education, Harvard University
Could a random admissions process help spare universities from legal trouble and save time and money?Adam Alagna/www.shutterstock.com

If the Harvard admissions trial teaches us anything, it should be that there are more brilliant and accomplished young people in the United States eager for a top-notch education than there are seats to accommodate...

Read more: Why elite colleges should use a lottery to admit students

Let them eat more fat? Researcher argues that a balance of types of fat is the key

  • Written by Heidi Silver, Associate Professor of Medicine, Vanderbilt University
A mix of fats, such as those found in nuts, avocados, salmon and olives, could be healthy and more satisfying.Craevschii Family/Shutterstock.com

Public health guidelines, such as the Dietary Guidelines for Americans, have long emphasized reducing dietary fat intake, but nutritionists and other health scientists now have more recent evidence that...

Read more: Let them eat more fat? Researcher argues that a balance of types of fat is the key

What Catholics can learn from protests of the past

  • Written by Mara Willard, Visiting Assistant Professor, International Studies, Boston College
A woman holds up a quilt with photos of people who say they were abused as children by priests, in San Diego, 2007.AP Photo/Denis Poroy

Pope Francis started the new year criticizing some Catholic bishops for their role in the church’s sexual abuse crisis. In a letter to bishops gathered at Mundelein Seminary in Illinois for a spiritual...

Read more: What Catholics can learn from protests of the past

Venezuelans want President Maduro out, but most would oppose foreign military intervention to remove him

  • Written by David Smilde, Professor of Sociology, Tulane University

Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro, who has led his country into one of the world’s worst economic crises, will be sworn in for a new six-year term on Jan. 10.

It will be a lonely inauguration. Some 40 countries – including the United States, Brazil, Colombia and the entire European Union – refuse to recognize Maduro as...

Read more: Venezuelans want President Maduro out, but most would oppose foreign military intervention to...

When it comes to brain tumors, a patient's sex matters

  • Written by Joshua Rubin, Professor, Pediatrics and Neuroscience, Washington University in St Louis
Different genes drive cancer growth in males and females.Imagentle/Shutterstock.com

Have you ever wondered why, in most species, males are larger and more ornamented than females? It’s an evolutionarily determined aspect of biology, but what does it mean for human health and disease? What are the implications of needing one chart to describe...

Read more: When it comes to brain tumors, a patient's sex matters

What's behind our appetite for self-destruction?

  • Written by Mark Canada, Executive Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, Indiana University
There seems be an attractive quality to things that are ostensibly unhealthy or dangerous.Alisusha/Shutterstock.com

Each new year, people vow to put an end to self-destructive habits like smoking, overeating or overspending.

And how many times have we learned of someone – a celebrity, a friend or a loved one – who committed some...

Read more: What's behind our appetite for self-destruction?

How childbearing varies across US women in 3 charts

  • Written by Caroline Sten Hartnett, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of South Carolina
Women's education levels affect when they have children.o_shumilova/shutterstock.com

Falling U.S. fertility rates have been making headlines.

These reports tend to focus on a single measure: the average number of children that women have, nationally. However, this one number masks large and interesting variation in people’s childbearing...

Read more: How childbearing varies across US women in 3 charts

Los Manuscritos del mar Muerto son un vínculo inestimable con el pasado de la Biblia

  • Written by Daniel Falk, Professor of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies and Chaiken Family Chair in Jewish Studies, Pennsylvania State University
Un conservador trabaja con un fragmento de los Manuscritos del mar Muerto que contiene el Salmo 145 en el Instituto Franklin, en Filadelfia.AP Photo/Matt Rourke

El Museo de la Biblia en Washington D. C. en octubre eliminó de la exhibición cinco Manuscritos del mar Muerto después de que los análisis confirmaran que estos...

Read more: Los Manuscritos del mar Muerto son un vínculo inestimable con el pasado de la Biblia

Fact check: How many people are enslaved in the world today?

  • Written by Monti Datta, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Richmond
Burmese fishermen raise their hands as they are asked who among them wants to go home. Human trafficking sometimes occurs in the seafood industry.AP Photo/Dita Alangkara

Modern slavery is a crime against humanity. Although some types of enslavement, like sex trafficking, are widely known, others hide in plain sight. Enslavement happens in many...

Read more: Fact check: How many people are enslaved in the world today?

White right? How demographics is changing US politics

  • Written by Monica Duffy Toft, Director of the Center for Strategic Studies at The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University

When Donald Trump was campaigning to become the U.S. president, much of the discussion about his growing popularity focused on so-called “angry white males,” who had been struggling through years of declining economic opportunities. Their frustration led some of them to adopt and espouse white supremacist ideology.

In many media...

Read more: White right? How demographics is changing US politics

More Articles ...

  1. 3D scans of bat skulls help natural history museums open up dark corners of their collections
  2. 3D-printed guns may be more dangerous to their users than targets
  3. How the medical profession can help heal divisions as well as diseases
  4. The bizarre phenomenon of vacation surprise videos
  5. No, Trump is not like Obama on Middle East policy
  6. Would bringing back pork-barrel spending end government shutdowns?
  7. Congress used to pass bipartisan legislation – will it ever again?
  8. Women who ran for Congress avoided women's issues in their campaign ads
  9. Many hate crimes never make it into the FBI's database
  10. Why does it feel good to see someone fail?
  11. Schools fall short when it comes to helping students in grief – here's how they can improve
  12. Amelia Earhart would have a hard time disappearing in 2019
  13. Will China's moon landing launch a new space race?
  14. The euro at 20: An enduring success but a fundamental failure
  15. Competitive elections are good for democracy – just not every democracy
  16. Desinformación y la vacuna contra la gripe: 3 lecciones para combatir mitos
  17. Nancy Pelosi victorious – why the California Democrat was reelected speaker of the House
  18. Reclaiming lost calories: Tweaking photosynthesis boosts crop yields
  19. Emotion-reading tech fails the racial bias test
  20. The EPA has backed off enforcement under Trump – here are the numbers
  21. Should children as young as 12 be sent to juvenile detention?
  22. Gen Z entrepreneurs view higher education as vital to their startups
  23. Health insurers want you to try cheaper drugs first, but that can hurt you
  24. Quantifying the Holocaust: Measuring murder rates during the Nazi genocide
  25. The new Congress and the history of governing by a house divided
  26. Why the 'Child of Krakatau' volcano is still dangerous – a volcanologist explains
  27. An app that nudges people to eat their veggies only works when it's introduced with a human touch
  28. To feel happier, we have to resolve to the life we evolved to live
  29. Only 1 out of 36 newly elected female representatives in Congress is Republican – here's why it matters
  30. Clean up your cyber-hygiene – 6 changes to make in the new year
  31. A neuroscientist's tips for a new year tuneup for your brain
  32. Stories that made The Conversation unique in 2018
  33. Stumped by the stock market slump? Start by picturing a used car dealership
  34. The rise of modern loneliness: 4 essential reads
  35. Our complicated relationship with plastic: 5 essential reads
  36. Celebrating solutions that chip away at big problems: 3 essential reads
  37. CRISPR isn’t just for editing human embryos, it also works for plants and bugs: 5 essential reads
  38. US gun violence in 2018: 3 essential reads
  39. Remembering the caravan: 5 essential reads on the desperation behind Central American migration
  40. Remembering the caravan: 5 essential reads that show the desperation of Central American migrants
  41. Jesucristo a los 12 años
  42. Science of everyday life: 5 essential reads
  43. Of the trillion photos taken in 2018, which were the most memorable?
  44. Not all consumers are equal – in terms of what they save by using efficient appliances
  45. Listening to nature: How sound can help us understand environmental change
  46. Rightist Bolsonaro takes office in Brazil, promising populist change to angry voters
  47. Bolsonaro's anger won over working-class Brazilians, but his presidency may betray them
  48. Using gene drives to control wild mosquito populations and wipe out malaria
  49. Yes, there is a war between science and religion
  50. Flavored e-cigarettes are fueling a dangerous increase in tobacco use