NewsPronto

 
The Times Real Estate

.

The Conversation

'Powerpoint was not his thing': a poem on teaching and technology

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe Parana River in moonlight. Gisela Giardino, CC BY-SA

I am a scholar and teacher of Spanish and Portuguese. I am also a poet.

The several books of poetry I have published in English, Spanish and Guarani (an indigenous South American language and one of the official languages of Paraguay), plus numerous readings of my work, both in Paraguay and at...

Read more: 'Powerpoint was not his thing': a poem on teaching and technology

On the 120th anniversary of the X-ray, a look at how it changed our view of the world

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWilhelm Conrad Roentgen looking into an X-ray screen placed in front of a man's body and seeing the ribs and the bones of the arm.Wellcome Library, London, CC BY

Sunday, November 8 marks the 120th anniversary of one of the greatest moments in the history of science: an obscure German physics professor’s discovery of the X-ray. His name was...

Read more: On the 120th anniversary of the X-ray, a look at how it changed our view of the world

Ben Carson: token candidate

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageCarson smiles at the CNBC GOP debate. Rick Wilking/REUTERS

Ben Carson has now overtaken Donald Trump in the national polls as the GOP front-runner.

As a black man, I’m not at all sure how I should feel about this.

On the one hand, he represents a party that has dedicated itself to opposing President Obama at every turn, mostly because the pres...

Read more: Ben Carson: token candidate

How we got to now: why the US and Europe went different ways on GMOs

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePart of the ongoing debate: some papaya growers in Hawaii have planted a strain that has been genetically modified to resist a virus.remembertobreathe/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

There is a myth that circulates on both sides of the Atlantic: Americans accepted genetically modified organisms (GMOs) in their food supply without question, while the more...

Read more: How we got to now: why the US and Europe went different ways on GMOs

Here are some more reasons why liberal arts matter

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat constitutes liberal arts?University of Central Arkansas, CC BY-NC-ND

Lately, in the heated call for greater STEM (science, technology, engineering, math) education at every level, the traditional liberal arts have been needlessly, indeed recklessly, portrayed as the villain. And STEM fields have been (falsely) portrayed as the very opposite of...

Read more: Here are some more reasons why liberal arts matter

Labs make new, dangerous synthetic cannabinoid drugs faster than we can ban them

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePackets of synthetic cannabinoids illegally sold in New York City.Sebastien Malo/Reuters

XLR-11, PB-22, AB-FUBINACA, MAB-CHMINACA, 5F-AMB. These are the cryptic and sometimes unpronounceable names of the most dangerous drugs you’ve never heard of. They are responsible for kidney injury, psychosis, seizures, coma and death.

For instance,...

Read more: Labs make new, dangerous synthetic cannabinoid drugs faster than we can ban them

How campaign finance disenfranchises America's silent majority of socialists

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageSocialists: please raise your hand.Reuters

It took the excitement generated by the political campaign of a self-described socialist, Bernie Sanders, to put into stark relief the extent to which the United States political system fails to reflect and respond to the aspirations of most Americans.

That’s because decades of income stagnation have...

Read more: How campaign finance disenfranchises America's silent majority of socialists

Sam Smith's ambitious attempt to reshape the Bond song lands with a whimper

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageBritish singer Sam Smith is known for his soaring falsetto.Toby Melville/Reuters

Like most James Bond fans, we couldn’t wait to hear the theme song for Spectre, the 24th installment in the series. And having just spent two years writing a book about Bond songs, we were hoping it’d get people excited about what these songs can do.

But...

Read more: Sam Smith's ambitious attempt to reshape the Bond song lands with a whimper

More Articles ...

  1. Ted Cruz's birther problem
  2. Delayed or killed, Keystone pipeline will live on as political touchstone
  3. What is the legacy of Yitzhak Rabin?
  4. Ohio strikes blow against gerrymandering
  5. If a solar plant uses natural gas, is it still green?
  6. Lessons from Newark: why school reforms will not work without addressing poverty
  7. Wedding bells or single again: psychology predicts where your relationship is headed
  8. In the verses of Jordan's most popular poet, the hopes and fears of the Arab world
  9. Eleven body fluids we couldn’t live without
  10. Some find redemption on death row, but few find mercy
  11. In our Wi-Fi world, the internet still depends on undersea cables
  12. As US shutters aging nuclear plants, cutting emissions will become more costly
  13. What Grantland's demise says about ESPN's past and future ambitions
  14. Why Asian Americans don't vote Republican
  15. 'Rise' of China's yuan is much ado about little
  16. The biggest sticking point in Paris climate talks: money
  17. Look what is being sold to kids when they are in school
  18. What do the new breast cancer screening guidelines recommend about when to start yearly mammograms?
  19. It turns out clothes really do make the man
  20. Cities are booming but progress is uneven and, to some, too costly
  21. Hearing ghost voices relies on pseudoscience and fallibility of human perception
  22. Is one of the largest real estate deals in American history a requiem for middle-class New York?
  23. Why mayors are looking for ideas outside the city limits
  24. Can innovators build a future that's both disruptive and just?
  25. They might sound gross, but intestinal worms can actually be good for you
  26. What gets students motivated to work harder? Not money
  27. Paul Ryan just accepted the worst job in politics
  28. Breaking the link between a conservative worldview and climate skepticism
  29. What should we make of Paul Ryan’s fondness for Ayn Rand?
  30. Evolutionary psychology explains why haunted houses creep us out
  31. Solar power can cut consumers' bills and still be good for utilities
  32. Do liberal arts students learn how to collaborate?
  33. Scholars on the GOP debate: middle-class struggles take center stage as Rubio walks tightrope
  34. How CNBC created a GOP debate for the Twitter age
  35. Why can’t the UN protect civilians in places like Syria?
  36. What are the limits to free speech in schools?
  37. How texting helped fuel the anti-austerity protests roiling Europe
  38. In the fight against anemia, iron fortification is a clutch player
  39. Why aren't more women running for office?
  40. Could Hurricane Patricia be a harbinger of storms in a warming climate?
  41. Does 'translating' Shakespeare into modern English diminish its greatness?
  42. Why Google's plan to blanket wilderness with Wi-Fi is a bad idea
  43. Sugar isn't just empty, fattening calories -- it's making us sick
  44. California universities launch experiment to go carbon-neutral 'at scale'
  45. Tracking American eels on the open sea to crack the mystery of their migration
  46. When gang violence goes viral
  47. The modern, molecular hunt for the world's biodiversity
  48. The humble (ad-free!) origins of the first World Series broadcasts
  49. Explainer: what's the debt ceiling and why it's an obsolete way to control spending
  50. Obama calls for limits on school testing. Here's why