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Women preferred for STEM professorships – as long as they’re equal to or better than male candidates

  • Written by The Conversation
imageHow much do hiring decisions in academia factor in the gender of the applicant?Files image via www.shutterstock.com.

Since the 1980s, there has been robust real-world evidence of a preference for hiring women for entry-level professorships in science, engineering, technology and math (STEM). This evidence comes from hiring audits at universities....

Read more: Women preferred for STEM professorships – as long as they’re equal to or better than male candidates

Can it get more absurd? Now music teachers are being tested based on math and reading scores

  • Written by The Conversation
imageMusic teachers are being evaluated on subjects they do not teach.Author provided

Ms Matthews was apprehensive as she opened the envelope containing her evaluation report. She had worked hard over the summer, taking graduate classes to learn some new teaching strategies to help her students improve their music listening and reading skills. She had...

Read more: Can it get more absurd? Now music teachers are being tested based on math and reading scores

Canadian election: Scholars on what the rest of the world needs to know

  • Written by The Conversation
imageLiberal Party leader Justin Trudeau greets supporters. Jim Young/REUTERS

Canadians voted yesterday to toss out Stephen Harper’s Conservative Party in favor of newcomer Justin Trudeau and the Liberals. The change in leadership in Canada, the US’s biggest trading partner, has important implications in the US. We asked three scholars to...

Read more: Canadian election: Scholars on what the rest of the world needs to know

Can we expand solar power dramatically without damaging protected lands?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageRenewable energy developers choose sunny locations, which can be near protected lands. jsmoorman/flickr, CC BY-NC-SA

California has seen a rapid expansion of large-scale renewable energy development in the past decade, part of a state policy to lower pollution from power generation. Yet, our current power plant siting practices could dramatically...

Read more: Can we expand solar power dramatically without damaging protected lands?

Ruling shows Europe still vexed over NSA spying, leaving US companies in legal limbo

  • Written by The Conversation
imageThe high court's ruling has Google and other tech companies rushing to build data centers in Europe.Reuters

Earlier this month, US companies operating in Europe got some unwelcome news: the Data Transfer Pact between the European Union and the United States, more commonly known as “Safe Harbor,” had been ruled invalid.

For over 15 years,...

Read more: Ruling shows Europe still vexed over NSA spying, leaving US companies in legal limbo

New DNA analysis says your pooch's ancestors were Central Asian wolves

  • Written by The Conversation
imageYou've come a long way, baby.moggafogga, CC BY-NC-ND

Dogs' origin story goes something like this: sometime between 16,000 and 30,000 years ago, there were some stressed-out hungry wolves whose hunting territory had been encroached upon by humans. Luckily, these wolves were resourceful and they noticed human beings have a tendency to leave delicious...

Read more: New DNA analysis says your pooch's ancestors were Central Asian wolves

We're hiring!

  • Written by The Conversation
imageTCUS

We’re looking for two dynamic and experienced journalists to join The Conversation team based in Boston.

Are you passionate about local and community media, excited by ideas journalism and entrepreneurial? The Project Manager - Newspaper Outreach will lead a pilot initiative funded by the Knight Foundation aimed at bringing the content of...

Read more: We're hiring!

More Articles ...

  1. Milwaukee case could encourage gun stores to reduce illegal sales
  2. Learning from others, Michigan considers best options for future fracking
  3. Does a shorter week help kids with their learning?
  4. Does China care that it was left out of the Trans-Pacific trade club?
  5. When it comes to baseball's ethnic tensions, the problems run deeper than bat flips
  6. Scientist at work: observing termite behaviors, personalities – and souls?
  7. Clinton's anti-drugmaker rhetoric may win votes, but does it threaten our long-term health?
  8. Why do some moms cut ties with their kids?
  9. On global campuses, academic freedom has its limits
  10. Russian cooperation with Iran and Iraq has broader consequences than saving Assad
  11. China's slowdown is a sign of middle-class gains, not a reason for panic
  12. We are entering a new era of migration – and not just for people
  13. How the GOP circus act compromises American Democracy
  14. A 'Royal Rumble' in Syria means yet more chaos for civilians
  15. Why disciplining kids can be so tricky for parents and teachers
  16. US losing its dominance in global higher education market
  17. Will the Supreme Court kill the smart grid?
  18. Swinging between extremes in giving scientific credit where credit is due
  19. Brains work via their genes just as much as their neurons
  20. Should movie studios be worried about Netflix's first feature film?
  21. Craft chocolate shakes up industry as its sweet season begins
  22. Scholars on the Democratic debate: Hillary wins, Bernie hits a nerve
  23. Is it time America finally took a chance on Syria's refugees?
  24. Building a case, over time, for adding sustainability to nutritional guidelines
  25. Why more scientists are needed in the public square
  26. The CNN Democratic debate will be another circus
  27. Men and women biased about studies of STEM gender bias – in opposite directions
  28. If you think your emails are private, think again
  29. Meet Doc Savage, the most famous superhero you've never heard of
  30. Hydraulic fracturing components in Marcellus groundwater likely from surface operations, not wells
  31. Brain activity is as unique – and identifying – as a fingerprint
  32. Are some kids really smarter just because they know more words?
  33. Pathogen-carrying invasive fish from China threatens US waterways
  34. Why some religious Americans see same-sex marriage as a threat
  35. Svetlana Alexievich captured the psyche – and trauma – of a Soviet people and nation
  36. TPP's new battle lines may pose threat to world's biggest trade deal
  37. Could the peace deal in Colombia be a model for other conflicts?
  38. Are assigned readings from women professors different?
  39. As Syrian refugee crisis spreads to Europe, lessons from Turkey
  40. Why only now – after 51 years – war is ending in Colombia
  41. What happens to men who stay abstinent until marriage?
  42. Denis Mukwege deserves the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in Congo
  43. Chemistry Nobel DNA research lays foundation for new ways to fight cancer
  44. The universe’s most miraculous molecule
  45. Japan may have tricky time passing TPP after making concessions on rice, beef
  46. Want a 'free lunch'? Invest in America's infrastructure
  47. A carbon tax in waiting: we're not adapting as fast as climate is changing
  48. Arne Duncan's legacy: growing influence of a network of private actors on public education
  49. They won a Nobel for what? Why good science communication counts
  50. Is the Kunduz hospital strike a war crime? Don't jump to conclusions