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Do kids who grow kale eat kale?

  • Written by Garrett M. Broad, Assistant Professor of Communication and Media Studies, Fordham University
imagewoodleywonderworks, CC BY

It’s back-to-school time in the United States, and for countless children across the nation, it’s also time to get back into the school garden.

For centuries, educators and philosophers have argued that garden-based learning improves children’s intelligence and boosts their personal health. In recent...

Read more: Do kids who grow kale eat kale?

Pollen genetics can help with forensic investigations

  • Written by Karen L. Bell, Postdoctoral Fellow in Environmental Sciences, Emory University
imageGenetic techniques can help make pollen useful for cracking criminal cases.Karen L. Bell, CC BY-ND

Imagine you’re a detective working on a murder case. You have a body, but you believe it was moved from another location. Now what? There’s one unexpected tool you might use to follow up on this suspicion: forensic palynology. That’s...

Read more: Pollen genetics can help with forensic investigations

How a native plant ended up on reality TV, and why it's at risk

  • Written by Kathryn M. Flinn, Assistant Professor of Biology, Baldwin Wallace University
imageA valuable harvestPriya Jaishankar/Flickr, CC BY-NDimageAmerican ginseng about to flower, spring 2016.Photo by C.C. Flinn

In one of television’s more bizarre recent offerings, the History Channel show “Appalachian Outlaws” follows a band of West Virginians as they hunt rugged forests for American ginseng, a medicinal root worth...

Read more: How a native plant ended up on reality TV, and why it's at risk

US response to Zika: Fragmented and uneven

  • Written by Scott L. Greer, Associate Professor, Global Health Management and Policy, University of Michigan

On Sept. 1, officials in Florida reported that mosquitoes carrying the Zika virus had been found in Miami Beach. The Florida Department of Health reports 49 non-travel related cases of Zika. There are almost 2,700 cases of travel-associated cases in the continental U.S. Things are worse in the U.S. territories, where more than 14,000 locally...

Read more: US response to Zika: Fragmented and uneven

In another newly discovered song, Woody Guthrie continues his assault on 'Old Man Trump'

  • Written by Will Kaufman, Professor of American Literature and Culture, University of Central Lancashire
imageWoody Guthrie's tenancy in Fred Trump's Beach Haven apartment complex coincided with a diagnosis of Huntington's disease.Library of Congress

Earlier this year, I wrote about a cache of bitter writings by Woody Guthrie that I had discovered while conducting research for a book on the balladeer.

The invectives were directed against a man Guthrie had...

Read more: In another newly discovered song, Woody Guthrie continues his assault on 'Old Man Trump'

Decision from G20 leaders could prove the tipping point for free trade

  • Written by Alan Deardorff, Professor of International Economics Professor of Economics and Public Policy, University of Michigan

It’s essential that the G20 leaders push for adoption of the World Trade Organization’s Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA) at the summit meeting in Hangzhou, China, in the face of growing anti-globalization forces. This agreement could be the tipping point to highlight the importance of global free trade and prevent a revival of true...

Read more: Decision from G20 leaders could prove the tipping point for free trade

McDonald's and the global revolution of fast food workers

  • Written by Annelise Orleck, Professor of History, Dartmouth College
imageNYC Fight for $15 rallyLiz Cooke, CC BY

When it comes to their wages, McDonald’s workers around the world are not “Loving It” – and they haven’t been shy about expressing their discontent over the past four years.

But this Labor Day, America’s fast food workers can celebrate victories that have improved wages for...

Read more: McDonald's and the global revolution of fast food workers

Labor Day 2016: Six essential reads

  • Written by Bryan Keogh, Editor, Economics and Business, The Conversation
imageLunch break.Lego workers via www.shutterstock.com

This year marks the 135th Labor Day, a holiday that began with workers going on strike in New York City just to get a day off.

Workers no longer have to strike to enjoy the first Monday in September with their families, yet for many it’s no different from any other weekday, particularly for...

Read more: Labor Day 2016: Six essential reads

Why a four-day workweek is not good for your health

  • Written by Allard Dembe, Professor of Public Health, The Ohio State University
imageA four-day workweek won't guarantee you more days like this.www.shutterstock.com

Many employers and employees love the thought of a four-day workweek. Supposedly, a four-day work schedule allows workers extra time to pursue leisure activities and family togetherness. Spurred on by visions of spending more time at the beach, many people are now...

Read more: Why a four-day workweek is not good for your health

It's time we reinvented labor for the 21st century

  • Written by Thomas Kochan, Professor of Management, MIT Sloan School of Management
imageStrikes don't work as well as they used to.Striking workers via www.shutterstock.com

On Labor Day, politicians have traditionally paid lip service to the plight of the worker, whom the national holiday is meant to honor. With working-class struggles taking center stage in this year’s election, we will likely hear from them more than usual...

Read more: It's time we reinvented labor for the 21st century

More Articles ...

  1. Have we forgotten the true meaning of Labor Day?
  2. Melting glaciers, shifting biomes and dying trees in our national parks – yet we can take action on climate change
  3. Election legitimacy at risk, even without a November cyberattack
  4. How American policing fails neighborhoods -- and cops
  5. Early stage breast cancer: How to know whether to forgo chemo
  6. For African-American families, a daily task to combat negative stereotypes about hair
  7. How civic intelligence can teach what it means to be a citizen
  8. Believing in free will makes you feel more like your true self
  9. Does TPP's slow death mean the world is now unsafe for trade deals?
  10. Former chief White House ethics lawyer: Clinton Foundation controversy is just a distraction from bigger issue
  11. TV news stories about birth control quote politicians and priests more often than medical experts
  12. Cybathlon: A bionics competition for people with disabilities
  13. Who should pay for our corn ethanol policy – Big Oil or gas stations?
  14. Immigration: Five essential reads
  15. Why Colin Kaepernick is like George Washington
  16. To fix America’s child care, let’s look at the past
  17. How does a computer know where you're looking?
  18. Want to prevent lone wolf terrorism? Promote a 'sense of belonging'
  19. The U.S. wants Costa Rica to host refugees before they cross the border. Here's why
  20. Obama's Hawaiian marine preserve: Massive potential, monumental challenges
  21. Is the Trans-Pacific Partnership dead? Seven essential reads
  22. Are US antitrust regulators giving Silicon Valley's 'free' apps a free pass?
  23. Curing health care with a dose of big data and common sense
  24. The most important dam you probably haven't heard of
  25. Why has Japan's massacre of disabled gone unnoticed? For answers, look to the past
  26. Guns in Donald Trump's America
  27. Finding better ways to get hydrogen fuel from water
  28. A tale of two GDPs: Why Republicans and Democrats live in different economic realities
  29. How victims of terror are remembered distorts perceptions of safety
  30. Will a merged Tesla-SolarCity put a solar-powered battery in every home?
  31. Fentanyl and other synthetic opioids sold as counterfeits in deadly new trend
  32. How men benefit from family-friendly tenure policies
  33. Failed coup in Turkey means thousands are voting with their feet
  34. Scientists at work: Public archaeologists dig before the construction crews do
  35. Russia's aggressive power is resurgent, online and off
  36. Polio eradication effort challenged, but not derailed
  37. Rebuilding ground zero: How twin mandates of revival and remembrance reshaped Lower Manhattan
  38. Corporate sponsors at Yosemite? The case against privatizing national parks
  39. The real reason the EpiPen and other off-patents are so expensive
  40. David Duke, Donald Trump and the dog whistle
  41. Fracking and health: What we know from Pennsylvania's natural gas boom
  42. Could gay-straight alliances reduce school bullying?
  43. This little-known pioneering educator put coding in the classroom
  44. Understanding mosquitoes can help us find better ways to kill them
  45. Getting serious about funny: Psychologists see humor as a character strength
  46. Who dies in police custody? Texas, California offer new tools to find out
  47. What's ailing the ACA: Insurers or Congress?
  48. Why silence continues to surround pregnancy discrimination in the workplace
  49. Playing at torture, a not so trivial pursuit
  50. How the Islamic State recruits and coerces children