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Nonprofit news media leaders are struggling to stop leaning on the foundations that say they should branch out more

  • Written by Katherine Fink, Associate Professor of Media, Communications, and Visual Arts, Pace University
imageIf the basket falls, at least there are some other eggs on hand that might not break.Iryna Veklich/Moment via Getty Images

You’ve probably heard the adage about not putting all your eggs in one basket.

It’s an especially meaningful one for newspapers. For decades, they relied heavily on advertising revenue. That arrangement stopped...

Read more: Nonprofit news media leaders are struggling to stop leaning on the foundations that say they...

The one-size-fits-all diversity training model is broken – here’s a better alternative

  • Written by Radostina Purvanova, Professor of Management and Organizational Leadership, Drake University

Diversity training is more effective when it’s personalized, according to my new research in the peer-reviewed journal Applied Psychology.

As a professor of management, I partnered with Andrew Bryant, who studies social marketing, to develop an algorithm that identifies people’s “personas,” or psychological profiles, as they...

Read more: The one-size-fits-all diversity training model is broken – here’s a better alternative

Do photons wear out? An astrophysicist explains light’s ability to travel vast cosmic distances without losing energy

  • Written by Jarred Roberts, Project Scientist, University of California, San Diego
imageLight, whether from a star or your flashlight, travels at 186,000 miles per second.Artur Debat/Moment via Getty Images

My telescope, set up for astrophotography in my light-polluted San Diego backyard, was pointed at a galaxy unfathomably far from Earth. My wife, Cristina, walked up just as the first space photo streamed to my tablet. It sparkled...

Read more: Do photons wear out? An astrophysicist explains light’s ability to travel vast cosmic distances...

An 18th-century rebellion for liberty, equality and freedom − not in France or the United States, but Ireland

  • Written by Joseph Patrick Kelly, Professor of Literature and Director of Irish and Irish American Studies, College of Charleston
imageA sculpture in Wexford, Ireland, by Eamonn O'Doherty, called 'Fuascailt,' commemorates the 1798 rebellion.Niall Carson/PA Images via Getty Images

Shortly before midnight on May 23, 1798, highwaymen just north of Dublin intercepted and set on fire a mail coach headed to Belfast.

It was the signal meant to ignite revolution across all Ireland.

At the...

Read more: An 18th-century rebellion for liberty, equality and freedom − not in France or the United States,...

Teens of any age who drink alcohol with their parents’ permission drink more as young adults, new research shows

  • Written by Bernard Pereda, Doctoral Student in Psychoolgy, University at Buffalo
imageParents play an important role in teaching their children about alcohol.StockPlanets/E+ via Getty Images

Children and teenagers of any age who sip or taste alcohol with their parents’ permission are more likely to engage in risky drinking in young adulthood. That was the finding of a new study my colleagues and I published in the journal...

Read more: Teens of any age who drink alcohol with their parents’ permission drink more as young adults, new...

How 3D printing is personalizing health care

  • Written by Anne Schmitz, Associate Professor of Engineering, University of Wisconsin-Stout
imageA girl, wearing her prosthetic hands, walks to school in Uruguay.AP Photo/Matilde Campodonico

Three-dimensional printing is transforming medical care, letting the health care field shift from mass-produced solutions to customized treatments tailored to each patient’s needs. For instance, researchers are developing 3D-printed prosthetic hands s...

Read more: How 3D printing is personalizing health care

Ancient pollen reveals stories about Earth’s history, from the asteroid strike that killed the dinosaurs to the Mayan collapse

  • Written by Francisca Oboh Ikuenobe, Professor of Geology and Geophysics, Missouri University of Science and Technology
imageAn electron microscope image, colorized, shows different structures of pollen grains, including sunflower, morning glory and primrose. Dartmouth Electron Microscope Facility

If you are sneezing this spring, you are not alone. Every year, plants release billions of pollen grains into the air, specks of male reproductive material that many of us...

Read more: Ancient pollen reveals stories about Earth’s history, from the asteroid strike that killed the...

Governors are leading the fight against climate change and deforestation around the world, filling a void left by presidents

  • Written by Mary Nichols, Distinguished Counsel for the Emmett Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, University of California, Los Angeles
imageForests like the Amazon play vital roles in balancing the environment, from storing carbon to releasing oxygen. Silvestre Garcia-IntuitivoFilms/Stone/Getty Images

When the annual U.N. climate conference descends on the small Brazilian rainforest city of Belém in November 2025, it will be tempting to focus on the drama and disunity among...

Read more: Governors are leading the fight against climate change and deforestation around the world, filling...

Cutting HIV aid means undercutting US foreign and economic interests − Nigeria shows the human costs

  • Written by Kathryn Rhine, Associate Professor of General Internal Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
imageA large number of children are born with HIV in Nigeria.Kristian Buus/Corbis News via Getty Images

A little over two decades ago, addressing Nigeria’s HIV crisis topped U.S. President George W. Bush’s priorities. Africa’s most populous nation had 3.5 million HIV cases, and the disease threatened to destabilize the region and ultima...

Read more: Cutting HIV aid means undercutting US foreign and economic interests − Nigeria shows the human costs

Tomato trade dispute between the US and Mexico is boiling over again – with 21% tariffs due in July

  • Written by Andrew Muhammad, Professor of Agriculture and Resource Economics, University of Tennessee
imageThe country of origin – Mexico – is noted on the label of a package of Campari tomatoes for sale in the produce section of a Safeway grocery store on March 4, 2025, in Denver.AP Photo/David Zalubowski

Although technically they’re a fruit, tomatoes are one of the most-consumed vegetables, according to the U.S. Department of...

Read more: Tomato trade dispute between the US and Mexico is boiling over again – with 21% tariffs due in July

More Articles ...

  1. Leaders can promote gender equity without deepening polarization − here’s how
  2. Trump’s lifting of Syria sanctions is a win for Turkey, too – pointing to outsized role middle powers can play in regional affairs
  3. Space tourism’s growth blurs the line between scientific and symbolic achievement – a tourism scholar explains how
  4. Believe it or not, there was a time when the US government built beautiful homes for working-class Americans to deal with a housing crisis
  5. In what order did the planets in our solar system form?
  6. H-bomb creator Richard Garwin was a giant in science, technology and policy
  7. Landing on the Moon is an incredibly difficult feat − 2025 has brought successes and shortfalls for companies and space agencies
  8. Touch can comfort and heal, but also harm − a psychologist explains why gestures don’t always land as intended
  9. Why we fall for fake health information – and how it spreads faster than facts
  10. Cultivating obedience: Using the Justice Department to attack former officials consolidates power and deters dissent
  11. New chancellor, old constraints: Germany’s Friedrich Merz will have a hard time freeing the country from its self-imposed shackles
  12. Trump’s vision for Air Force One will turn it from the ‘Flying White House’ to a ‘palace in the sky’
  13. ‘Manu jumping’: The physics behind making humongous splashes in the pool
  14. Trump’s battle with elite universities overlooks where most students actually go to college
  15. Governments continue losing efforts to gain backdoor access to secure communications
  16. Placenta bandages have far more health benefits than risky placenta pills − a bioengineer explains
  17. Birthright citizenship case at Supreme Court reveals deeper questions about judicial authority to halt unlawful policies
  18. Disarming Hezbollah is key to Lebanon’s recovery − but task is complicated by regional shifts, ceasefire violations
  19. Disarming Hezbollah is key to Lebanon’s recovery − but the task is complicated by regional shifts, ceasefire violations
  20. Unprecedented cuts to the National Science Foundation endanger research that improves economic growth, national security and your life
  21. What Pope Leo XIV’s coat of arms and motto reveal about his dedication to the ideals of St. Augustine − an art historian explains
  22. Hurricane disaster planning with aging parents should start now, before the storm: 5 tips
  23. Congress began losing power decades ago − and now it’s giving away what remains to Trump
  24. Algebra is more than alphabet soup – it’s the language of algorithms and relationships
  25. US safety net helps protect children from abuse and neglect, and some of those programs are threatened by proposed budget cuts
  26. Pope Francis drew inspiration from Latin American church and its martyrs – leaving a legacy for Pope Leo
  27. Challenges to high-performance computing threaten US innovation
  28. Pacific voyagers’ remarkable environmental knowledge allowed for long-distance navigation without Western technology
  29. Pope Leo XIV’s link to Haiti is part of a broader American story of race, citizenship and migration
  30. How does the EPA know a pesticide is safe to use in my yard?
  31. Lady Gaga bomb plot: Thwarted plan lifts veil on the gamification of hate and gendered nature of online radicalization
  32. How your genes interact with your environment changes your disease risk − new research counts the ways
  33. Trump is making it easier to fire federal workers, but they have some legal protections - 3 essential reads
  34. Detroit’s next mayor can do these 3 things to support neighborhoods beyond downtown
  35. Taking intermittent quizzes reduces achievement gaps and enhances online learning, even in highly distracting environments
  36. How redefining just one word could strip the Endangered Species Act’s ability to protect vital habitat
  37. ‘The pope is Peruvian!’ How 2 decades in South America shaped the vision of Pope Leo XIV
  38. What or where is the Indo-Pacific? How a foreign policy pivot redefined the global map
  39. Why protecting wildland is crucial to American freedom and identity
  40. Trump moves to gut low-income energy assistance as summer heat descends and electricity prices rise
  41. AI can scan vast numbers of social media posts during disasters to guide first responders
  42. Why collect asteroid samples? 4 essential reads on what these tiny bits of space rock can tell scientists
  43. Researchers uncovered hundreds of genes linked to OCD, providing clues about how it changes the brain − new research
  44. Why do cuts to Medicaid matter for Americans over 65? 2 experts on aging explain why lives are at stake
  45. Where tomorrow’s scientists prefer to live − and where they’d rather not
  46. How Asian American became a racial grouping – and why many with Asian roots don’t identify with the term these days
  47. Trump’s bid to end birthright citizenship heads to the Supreme Court
  48. Trump heads to the Gulf aiming to bolster trade ties – but side talks on Tehran, Gaza could drive a wedge between US and Israel
  49. From defenders to skeptics: The sharp decline in young Americans’ support for free speech
  50. If you really want to close the US trade deficit, try boosting innovation in rural manufacturing