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Eco-authenticity: advocating for a low-carbon world while living a high-carbon lifestyle

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageMuch of the U.S. was built around the automobile, with greater distances to be covered than in places like Europe, making Americans' daily lifestyles higher in energy than elsewhere.johnkay/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

Every morning I awake torn between a desire to save the world and an inclination to savor it. This makes it hard to plan the day.

This...

Read more: Eco-authenticity: advocating for a low-carbon world while living a high-carbon lifestyle

Why the new SAT is a reminder to improve the teaching of writing

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageAre students learning how to write?Caleb Roenigk, CC BY

The SAT, the test that many schools require to check for college readiness, has recently gone through a makeover. Perhaps the most significant change is to the writing portion of the SAT, which presents students with new and more complex reading and and writing challenges.

College Board, the...

Read more: Why the new SAT is a reminder to improve the teaching of writing

Know your bugs – a closer look at viruses, bacteria, and parasites

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Stop the spread of superbugs,” “15 superbugs and other scary diseases” and “Superbug bacteria found in tested hotel rooms” are headlines we often read or hear about. But what do we mean when we say “bugs”?

The term is used to describe viruses, bacteria and parasites. While they can all make us sick,...

Read more: Know your bugs – a closer look at viruses, bacteria, and parasites

Tuberculosis kills thousands of people every day – we aren't doing enough to stop it

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

“But hasn’t TB been eradicated?,” my seatmate on a recent flight to South Africa asked me. This question crops up pretty frequently when I tell people what I do for a living. I research the development of diagnostic tests for diseases using breath, sputum, blood and urine, and at the moment I am working on a diagnostic breath...

Read more: Tuberculosis kills thousands of people every day – we aren't doing enough to stop it

A new strategy for drought-stressed cities: graywater recycling

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageTokyo International Youth HostelGavin Anderson/Flickr, CC BY-SA

Many regions of the United States are struggling with water shortages. Large areas of the West are contending with moderate to severe drought, while California is now in the fifth year of one of the most extreme droughts in its history. Even non-arid regions, such as the Southeast, are...

Read more: A new strategy for drought-stressed cities: graywater recycling

How the Supreme Court made economic inequality a whole lot worse

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageLady Justice may not be blind after all.Lady Justice via www.shutterstock.com

Economic inequality is now firmly on the public agenda as candidates and voters alike look for someone to blame for stagnant wages, entrenched poverty and a widening gap between rich and poor.

Bernie Sanders blames Wall Street. Donald Trump points his finger at companies...

Read more: How the Supreme Court made economic inequality a whole lot worse

What if the FBI tried to crack an Android phone? We attacked one to find out

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageHow many attempts will it take to unlock this phone?Phone with lock and keys via shutterstock.com

The Justice Department has managed to unlock an iPhone 5c used by the gunman Syed Rizwan Farook, who with his wife killed 14 people in San Bernardino, California, last December. The high-profile case has pitted federal law enforcement agencies against...

Read more: What if the FBI tried to crack an Android phone? We attacked one to find out

What can fish mouths teach us about engineering clog-free filters?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFilter-feeding fish have had 150 million years to improve filtration.Rob Holm / USFWS, CC BY

Filter-feeding fish accomplish a feat that human technologies cannot: species including goldfish, menhaden and basking sharks filter tiny algal cells or shrimp-like prey from huge volumes of water without clogging their oral filters.

Since fish have been...

Read more: What can fish mouths teach us about engineering clog-free filters?

Can a Russian-funded cable network actually promote free press in the U.S.?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

With the recently announced shutdown of Al Jazeera America, the alternative cable news scene is in flux.

Launched as a corrective to the politicized and spectacle-heavy programming of Fox News, CNN and MSNBC, Al Jazeera America positioned itself as a fact-based, unbiased news source. Even though the network won awards for reporting, the Qatari...

Read more: Can a Russian-funded cable network actually promote free press in the U.S.?

More Articles ...

  1. When do children develop their gender identity?
  2. Should security forces have stopped the terrorist attacks in Belgium?
  3. Can free trade and TPP survive rise of the 'new right'?
  4. We don't talk much about nanotechnology risks anymore, but that doesn't mean they're gone
  5. Mexican desert mangroves – small but valuable in dealing with climate change
  6. Could the language barrier actually fall within the next 10 years?
  7. Athletes look for an edge in a new place: virtual reality
  8. If we don't own our genes, what protects study subjects in genetic research?
  9. Is global warming causing marine diseases to spread?
  10. Here's how witnessing violence harms children’s mental health
  11. Will voters' fear of terrorism propel Trump to the White House?
  12. Will the new education law allow for teachers with lower qualifications?
  13. Scientists turn to 3D printing, digital simulations to treat heart disease
  14. Why it makes little sense to regulate rainwater barrels in the dry western U.S.
  15. The other opioid crisis -- people in poor countries can't get the pain medication they need
  16. Cuba's sustainable agriculture at risk in U.S. thaw
  17. How the death penalty may keep innocent people in prison
  18. The Common Core explained
  19. Why do people risk their lives – or the lives of others – for the perfect selfie?
  20. Cheap gas could delay America's efficiency targets for cars and trucks
  21. How to transform workers' campaign rage into better jobs and wages
  22. Big data security problems threaten consumers' privacy
  23. Will requiring food stamp retailers to sell more healthy food make it easier for SNAP recipients to eat better?
  24. Humanizing the heroin epidemic: a photo essay
  25. The history of student loans goes back to the Middle Ages
  26. Brussels attacks: how radicalization happens and who is at risk
  27. President Trump's foreign policy dystopia
  28. American elections ranked worst among Western democracies. Here’s why.
  29. Are blondes actually dumb?
  30. Do protectionist policies like Trump's lead to trade wars?
  31. To empower women, give them better access to water
  32. Will the end of breeding orcas at SeaWorld change much for animals in captivity?
  33. Global warming is pushing wine harvests earlier – but not necessarily for the better
  34. What we've learned from the deadly Oso, Washington landslide two years on
  35. How the Grand Canyon changed our ideas of natural beauty
  36. A nation at risk -- how gifted, low-income kids are left behind
  37. In TV's shifting landscape, advertisers scramble to adapt
  38. Radiation combined with immune-stimulating drugs could pack a powerful punch against cancer cells
  39. What two legal scholars learned from studying 70 years of Supreme Court confirmation hearings
  40. Fighting superbugs with nanotechnology and light
  41. As Obama makes historic visit, is Cuba ready for change?
  42. Polar bears, Princess Diana, gun rights: The opinions of Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland
  43. Does the First Amendment protect people who film the police?
  44. Acne treatment: antibiotics don't need to kill bacteria to clear up your skin
  45. Picture of Pluto further refined by months of New Horizons data
  46. How do children decide what's fair?
  47. A look inside the Czech Republic's booming fertility holiday industry
  48. Beyond today's crowdsourced science to tomorrow's citizen science cyborgs
  49. Net neutrality may be at risk when companies like Netflix subsidize your data
  50. Roots of opioid epidemic can be traced back to two key changes in pain management