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'Telepresence' can help bring advanced courses to schools that don't offer them

  • Written by Jennifer Darling-Aduana, Assistant Professor of Learning Technologies, Vanderbilt University
imageRemote learning can be used for more than just education at home.Suzanne Kreiter/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take on interesting academic work.

The big idea

In schools where students want to take an advanced course that the school doesn’t offer, the telepresence model, which enables students in one school to...

Read more: 'Telepresence' can help bring advanced courses to schools that don't offer them

3 lessons from how schools responded to the 1918 pandemic worth heeding today

  • Written by Mary Battenfeld, Clinical Professor of American and New England Studies, Boston University
imageThese kids learned about staying healthy in schools around the time of the 1918 pandemic.Cornell University Library

Much like what has happened in 2020, most U.S. schools closed during the 1918 influenza pandemic. Their doors were shut for up to four months, with some exceptions, to curb the spread of the disease.

As a professor who teaches and...

Read more: 3 lessons from how schools responded to the 1918 pandemic worth heeding today

COVID-19 will turn the state pension problem into a fiscal crisis

  • Written by Raymond Scheppach, Professor of Public Policy, University of Virginia
imageMost states struggle to meet pension funding needs -- and the pandemic will make it worse. hudiemm/Getty

You may be wondering why, over the last few months, the state pension problem – normally not a subject of widespread discussion – has been in the news.

In fact, you may be wondering just what the state pension problem is.

The problem...

Read more: COVID-19 will turn the state pension problem into a fiscal crisis

What Buddhism and science can teach each other – and us – about the universe

  • Written by Chris Impey, University Distinguished Professor of Astronomy, University of Arizona
imageThe Dalai Lama speaks about quantum effects with Chinese scientists at the Main Tibetan Temple, Nov. 1, 2018, in Dharamshala, India. Shyam Sharma/Hindustan Times via Getty Images

These are trying times. A global recession sparked by the coronavirus pandemic, and widespread civil unrest, have created a combustible mix of angst – stressors that...

Read more: What Buddhism and science can teach each other – and us – about the universe

A pragmatist philosopher's view of the US response to the coronavirus pandemic

  • Written by Johnathan Flowers, Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Worcester State University
imageAmerican thinker John Dewey in 1946.JHU Sheridan Libraries/Gado/Getty Images

Though many in the U.S. are disoriented and disheartened by the lack of an effective federal response to the coronavirus pandemic, John Dewey, an American philosopher, psychologist and educator, would not have been surprised.

Dewey presented a nuanced analysis of democracy,...

Read more: A pragmatist philosopher's view of the US response to the coronavirus pandemic

Uruguay quietly beats coronavirus, distinguishing itself from its South American neighbors – yet again

  • Written by Jennifer Pribble, Associate Professor of Political Science and Global Studies, University of Richmond
imageLife is resuming in Uruguay, where some students returned to school in April and the remainder will go back in on June 29. Daniel Rodrigues/adhoc/AFP via Getty Images)

Latin America is the world’s new coronavirus epicenter, but Uruguay – a small South American nation of 3.5 million people – has so far avoided the devastation...

Read more: Uruguay quietly beats coronavirus, distinguishing itself from its South American neighbors – yet...

Are we all OCD now, with obsessive hand-washing and technology addiction?

  • Written by David Rosenberg, Professor of Psychiatry and Neuroscience, Wayne State University
imageWhat once looked like obsessive-compulsive disorder has become normal when faced with a deadly pandemic. Busà Photography via Getty Images

One of the hallmarks of obsessive-compulsive disorder is contamination fears and excessive hand-washing. Years ago, a patient with severe OCD came to my office wearing gloves and a mask and refused to sit...

Read more: Are we all OCD now, with obsessive hand-washing and technology addiction?

India's goddesses of contagion provide protection in the pandemic – just don't make them angry

  • Written by Tulasi Srinivas, Professor of Anthropology, Religion and Transnational Studies, Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies, Emerson College
image'Maa Bharati On Coronavirus'Sandhya Kumari/Gallerist.in, CC BY-SA

Hindus in India have had a helping hand – several in fact – when it comes to fighting deadly contagions like COVID-19: multi-armed goddesses co-opted to help contain and kill pestilence.

Collectively known as “Amman,” or the Divine Mother, the goddesses of...

Read more: India's goddesses of contagion provide protection in the pandemic – just don't make them angry

Coronavirus shows how ageism is harmful to health of older adults

  • Written by Paul Nash, Instructional Associate Professor of Gerontology, University of Southern California
imageIn Ventura, California, a woman who is social isolating greets a little boy who has come to visit.Getty Images / Brent Stirton

People over 65 years old account for about 80% of the deaths related to COVID-19 in the U.S. But we have to consider comorbidity, not just the number of years lived. Older people more likely live with underlying health...

Read more: Coronavirus shows how ageism is harmful to health of older adults

No justice, no peace: Why Catholic priests are kneeling with George Floyd protesters

  • Written by Anna L. Peterson, Professor of Religion, University of Florida
imageBishop Mark Seitz and priests from his diocese knelt for 8 minutes and 46 seconds to honor George Floyd, El Paso, June 1, 2020.Courtesy of Corrie Boudreaux/El Paso Matters, CC BY-ND

Two days after the Catholic bishop of El Paso, Mark Seitz, knelt with a dozen other priests in a silent prayer for George Floyd holding a “Black Lives...

Read more: No justice, no peace: Why Catholic priests are kneeling with George Floyd protesters

More Articles ...

  1. Being convicted of a crime has thousands of consequences besides incarceration – and some last a lifetime
  2. Why hairdressers, gyms and the Trump campaign are asking people to sign COVID-19 waivers
  3. What the archaeological record reveals about epidemics throughout history – and the human response to them
  4. Was the coronavirus outbreak an intelligence failure?
  5. What is a derecho? An atmospheric scientist explains these rare but dangerous storm systems
  6. Police unions are one of the biggest obstacles to transforming policing
  7. Video: How simple math can help predict the melting of sea ice
  8. Why stocks are soaring even as coronavirus cases surge, at least 20 million remain unemployed and the US sinks into recession
  9. Churchgoers aren't able to lift every voice and sing during the pandemic – here's why that matters
  10. A short history of black women and police violence
  11. Am I immune to COVID-19 if I have antibodies?
  12. High-tech surveillance amplifies police bias and overreach
  13. Students demand removal of 'mild racist' from Georgia landscape
  14. China's efforts to win hearts and minds with aid and investment may make all the difference if there's a cold war with the US
  15. How DC Mayor Bowser used graffiti to protect public space
  16. More people eat frog legs than you think – and humans are harvesting frogs at unsustainable rates
  17. What colleges and universities can do to improve police-community relations
  18. Could China's strategic pork reserve be a model for the US?
  19. How 'Karen' went from a popular baby name to a stand-in for white entitlement
  20. Why soldiers might disobey the president's orders to occupy US cities
  21. Who killed Sweden's prime minister? 1986 assassination of Olof Palme is finally solved – maybe
  22. During Floyd protests, media industry reckons with long history of collaboration with law enforcement
  23. Neighborhood-based friendships making a comeback for kids in the age of coronavirus
  24. Is it safe to stay in a hotel, cabin or rental home yet?
  25. Adding women to corporate boards improves decisions about medical product safety
  26. Going online due to COVID-19 this fall could hurt colleges' future
  27. Globalization really started 1,000 years ago
  28. Globalization really started 1,000 years ago
  29. State prosecutors and voters – not the feds – can hold corrupt officials accountable
  30. First space tourists will face big risks, as private companies gear up for paid suborbital flights
  31. Life on welfare isn't what most people think it is
  32. City compost programs turn garbage into 'black gold' that boosts food security and social justice
  33. COVID-19 is deadlier for black Brazilians, a legacy of structural racism that dates back to slavery
  34. How the Federal Reserve literally makes money
  35. Why some nursing homes are better than others at protecting residents and staff from COVID-19
  36. Want to stop the COVID-19 stress meltdown? Train your brain
  37. Could pressure for COVID-19 drugs lead the FDA to lower its standards?
  38. The stay-at-home slowdown – how the pandemic upended our perception of time
  39. Cuba's clean rivers show the benefits of reducing nutrient pollution
  40. How the US government sold the Peace Corps to the American public
  41. Indian philosophy helps us see clearly, act wisely in an interconnected world
  42. Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition
  43. Militias evaluate beliefs, action as president threatens soldiers in the streets
  44. What – or who – is antifa?
  45. COVID-19's deadliness for men is revealing why researchers should have been studying immune system sex differences years ago
  46. Coronavirus deaths and those of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery have something in common: Racism
  47. States are making it harder to sue nursing homes over COVID-19: Why immunity from lawsuits is a problem
  48. Supreme Court phoning it in means better arguments, more public engagement
  49. Scientific fieldwork 'caught in the middle' of US-Mexico border tensions
  50. Workplaces are turning to devices to monitor social distancing, but does the tech respect privacy?