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Kids need to wear masks when they go to school in person, and parents can help them get the hang of that

  • Written by Meg Sorg, Clinical Assistant Professor of Nursing, Purdue University
imageLike mother, like daughterPaul Hennessy/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

I’m a pediatric nursing professor with four young children. The youngest is 9 months old and the oldest is 9. My oldest will soon enter third grade, and his brother will be in second. My family plans to send them both back to their school for in-person...

Read more: Kids need to wear masks when they go to school in person, and parents can help them get the hang...

Lawmakers keen to break up 'big tech' like Amazon and Google need to realize the world has changed a lot since Microsoft and Standard Oil

  • Written by Bhaskar Chakravorti, Dean of Global Business, The Fletcher School, Tufts University
imageHouse lawmakers grilled these four CEOs on July 29.AP Photo

Big tech is back in the spotlight.

The chief executives of Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google testified before Congress on July 29 to defend their market dominance from accusations they’re stifling rivals. Lawmakers and regulators are increasingly talking about antitrust action and...

Read more: Lawmakers keen to break up 'big tech' like Amazon and Google need to realize the world has changed...

¿Te imaginas la vida sin aguacate? Estos son los momentos en la historia en que pudo desaparecer

  • Written by Jeffrey Miller, Associate Professor, Hospitality Management, Colorado State University

Faith-based 'violence interrupters' stop gang shootings with promise of redemption for at-risk youth – not threats of jail

  • Written by Deanna Wilkinson, Associate Professor. Department of Human Sciences, The Ohio State University
imageA demonstrator heads to an anti-violence protest in Chicago, which has struggled with gun violence for decades, July 7, 2018.Jim Young/AFP via Getty Images)

The July 4 weekend was one of the deadliest in recent U.S. history, with 160 people, including several small children, killed by gun violence in Chicago, New York, Atlanta and beyond.

And the...

Read more: Faith-based 'violence interrupters' stop gang shootings with promise of redemption for at-risk...

How to hide from a drone – the subtle art of 'ghosting' in the age of surveillance

  • Written by Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick, Associate Professor of Political Sociology, University of San Diego
imageThe federal government has used military-grade border patrol drones like this one to monitor protests in US cities._ Jonathan Cutrer/Flickr, CC BY-SA

Drones of all sizes are being used by environmental advocates to monitor deforestation, by conservationists to track poachers, and by journalists and activists to document large protests. As a politica...

Read more: How to hide from a drone – the subtle art of 'ghosting' in the age of surveillance

Yes, kids can get COVID-19 – 3 pediatricians explain what's known about coronavirus and children

  • Written by Kathryn Moffett-Bradford, Professor of Pediatrics, Division Chief of Pediatric Infectious Diseases, West Virginia University
imageChildren are at risk of getting sick from coronavirus and need to practice social distancing and mask wearing too. AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File

We arethree pediatricinfectious disease specialists who live and work in West Virginia. The West Virginia University health system serves 400,000 children and according to our internal data, to date, 2,520...

Read more: Yes, kids can get COVID-19 – 3 pediatricians explain what's known about coronavirus and children

Marie Tharp pioneered mapping the bottom of the ocean 6 decades ago – scientists are still learning about Earth's last frontier

  • Written by Suzanne OConnell, Professor of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Wesleyan University
imageTharp with an undersea map at her desk. Rolled sonar profiles of the ocean floor are on the shelf behind her.Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and the estate of Marie Tharp

Despite all the deep-sea expeditions and samples taken from the seabed over the past 100 years, humans still know very little about the ocean’s deepest reaches. And there...

Read more: Marie Tharp pioneered mapping the bottom of the ocean 6 decades ago – scientists are still...

Many students with the potential to excel in STEM fields struggle in school

  • Written by Joni Lakin, Associate Professor of Educational Studies, University of Alabama
imageWhat else might she build someday?Kobyakov/iStock via Getty Images Plus

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

The big idea

Students who have the kinds of talent scientists and engineers need to solve problems by visualizing how objects could be rotated, combined or changed in three dimensions often struggle at school....

Read more: Many students with the potential to excel in STEM fields struggle in school

Companies are struggling to engage with today's activists – a new survey explores why

  • Written by Fred Cook, Director, Center for Public Relations, University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
imageCompanies are having trouble keeping up with the recent rise of activism.AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

Dozens of companies with no track record of activism have made statements in recent weeks in support of Black Lives Matter following what I believe is unprecedented pressure from racial justice protesters.

It may have come as a surprise to some...

Read more: Companies are struggling to engage with today's activists – a new survey explores why

Cómo Jesús llegó a parecerse a un europeo blanco

  • Written by Anna Swartwood House, Assistant Professor of Art History, University of South Carolina
imagePintura que representa la transfiguración de Jesús, un evento narrado en el Nuevo Testamento en el que Jesús se vuelve radiante sobre una montaña.Artist Raphael /Collections Hallwyl Museum, CC BY-SA

La representación de Jesús como un hombre blanco y europeo vuelve a estar en el punto de mira durante este...

Read more: Cómo Jesús llegó a parecerse a un europeo blanco

More Articles ...

  1. When a winner becomes a loser: Winston Churchill was kicked out of office in the British election of 1945
  2. 4 lawsuits that challenge Trump's federal agents in Portland test issues other cities will likely face
  3. At the evangelical Creation Museum, dinosaurs lived alongside humans and the world is 6,000 years old
  4. Urban planning as a tool of white supremacy – the other lesson from Minneapolis
  5. What are the origins of cathedrals and chapels?
  6. Video: Slowing deforestation is the key to preventing the next pandemic – but what does that cost?
  7. The road to electric vehicles with lower sticker prices than gas cars – battery costs explained
  8. The mystery of the missing portrait of Robert Hooke, 17th-century scientist extraordinaire
  9. The Americans with Disabilities Act at 30: A cause for celebration during COVID-19?
  10. Síndrome de Guillain-Barré, raro trastorno neurológico relacionado con COVID-19
  11. Making coronavirus testing easy, accurate and fast is critical to ending the pandemic – the US response is falling far short
  12. The office is dead! Long live the office in a post-pandemic world
  13. Statues topple and a Catholic church burns as California reckons with its Spanish colonial past
  14. Why Hagia Sophia remains a potent symbol of spiritual and political authority
  15. The ADA isn't just about ramps -- over 30 years, it has profoundly changed the deaf community
  16. John Lewis traded the typical college experience for activism, arrests and jail cells
  17. Love avocados? Thank the toxodon
  18. 3 questions to ask yourself next time you see a graph, chart or map
  19. ¿Cómo el 'blanco' se convirtió en una metáfora de las cosas buenas?
  20. Why hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine don't block coronavirus infection of human lung cells
  21. How the images of John Lewis being beaten during 'Bloody Sunday' went viral
  22. Science elicits hope in Americans – its positive brand doesn't need to be partisan
  23. Disinformation campaigns are murky blends of truth, lies and sincere beliefs – lessons from the pandemic
  24. Online Christian pilgrimage: How a virtual tour to Lourdes follows a tradition of innovation
  25. Massive online open courses see exponential growth during COVID-19 pandemic
  26. What are political parties' platforms – and do they matter?
  27. How to make sure you're wearing your mask right
  28. Low-wage service workers are facing new emotional hazards in the workplace during COVID-19
  29. Is telehealth as good as in-person care? A telehealth researcher explains how to get the most out of remote health care
  30. The Constitution doesn't have a problem with mask mandates
  31. People are dying in US prisons, and not just from COVID-19
  32. Telework mostly benefits white, affluent Americans – and offers few climate benefits
  33. How other countries reopened schools during the pandemic – and what the US can learn from them
  34. How popular culture hobbles protest movements
  35. Random testing in Indiana shows COVID-19 is 6 times deadlier than flu, and 2.8% of the state has been infected
  36. Georgia's election disaster shows how bad voting in 2020 can be
  37. 'In a perfectly just republic,' Bella Abzug – born a century ago – would have been president
  38. Coronavirus numbers confusing you? Here's how to make sense of them
  39. Russian cyberthreat extends to coronavirus vaccine research
  40. Social networks aim to erase hate but miss the target on guns
  41. Could employers and states mandate COVID-19 vaccinations? Here's what the courts have ruled
  42. Black men face high discrimination and depression, even as their education and incomes rise
  43. Colleges expect athletes to work but not to air any grievances – here's why that's wrong
  44. New teachers mistakenly assume Black students are angry
  45. How Taiwanese death rituals have adapted for families living in the US
  46. With fewer cars on US streets, now is the time to reinvent roadways and how we use them
  47. ALS scientific breakthrough: Diabetes drug metformin shows promise in mouse study for a common type of ALS
  48. Sexism pushed Rosalind Franklin toward the scientific sidelines during her short life, but her work still shines on her 100th birthday
  49. In Kashmir, military lockdown and pandemic combined are one giant deadly threat
  50. Electoral College benefits whiter states, study shows