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How to teach and parent better in the age of big data

  • Written by Katie Headrick Taylor, Assistant Professor of Learning Sciences and Human Development, University of Washington
Summing up a student in numbers.Chatchai Kritsetsakul/shutterstock.com

At the parent-teacher conference, I sat across the table from my first grader’s teacher in a chair made for a 6-year-old. The teacher pointed to percentages scrawled in red ink. I looked and listened.

“This number,” she said, “is his Lexile score.”...

Read more: How to teach and parent better in the age of big data

CBD: The next weapon in the war against opioid addiction?

  • Written by Jenny Wilkerson, Assistant Professor of Pharmacodynamics, University of Florida
A new study suggests that CBD could help curve cravings in people who have an opioid use disorder.Evgenly Goncharov photo/Shutterstock.com

CBD, or cannabidiol, is everywhere, with word on the street saying that it can cure everything from a bad mood to cancer. However, most of these claims are not based on scientific evidence. Animal studies...

Read more: CBD: The next weapon in the war against opioid addiction?

High-tech fishing gear could help save critically endangered right whales

  • Written by Michael Moore, Senior Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Only about 411 North Atlantic right whales exist, so every animal lost is a blow to the species' chance of surviving.(c) Nick Hawkins

Many fish, marine mammals and seabirds that inhabit the world’s oceans are critically endangered, but few are as close to the brink as the North Atlantic right whale (Eubalaena glacialis). Only about 411 of...

Read more: High-tech fishing gear could help save critically endangered right whales

Sanders and AOC want to cap interest rates on consumer loans at 15% – here's why that's a bad idea

  • Written by Anne Fleming, Associate Professor of Law, Georgetown University
Credit cards sometimes charge exceptionally high interest rates.Africa Studio/Shutterstock.com

Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez want to cap consumer interest rates in an effort to curb “sky high” credit card charges and other forms of predatory lending.

While that sounds nice in principle, in practice their plan...

Read more: Sanders and AOC want to cap interest rates on consumer loans at 15% – here's why that's a bad idea

India's Prime Minister Modi pursues politics of Hindu nationalism – what does that mean?

  • Written by Sumit Ganguly, Distinguished Professor of Political and the Tagore Chair in Indian Cultures and Civilizations., Indiana University
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi is garlanded after winning the elections.AP Photo/Manish Swarup

Almost immediately after winning a second term in office on May 23, India’s Prime Minister Modi gave a speech making light of parties and individuals who had espoused secularism over the past five years.

During the five years while the Indian...

Read more: India's Prime Minister Modi pursues politics of Hindu nationalism – what does that mean?

Trump and the problem with pardons

  • Written by Andrew Bell, Assistant Professor of International Studies, Indiana University

As a veteran, I was astonished by the recent news that President Trump may be considering pardons for U.S. military members accused or convicted of war crimes. But as a scholar who studies the U.S. military and combat ethics, I understand even more clearly the harmful long-term impact such pardons can have on the military.

My research, along with...

Read more: Trump and the problem with pardons

How the new 'Aladdin' stacks up against a century of Hollywood stereotyping

  • Written by Evelyn Alsultany, Associate Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity, University of Southern California
In the live-action 'Aladdin,' Mena Massoud stars Aladdin, while Will Smith plays the Genie.Daniel Smith/Walt Disney Pictures

Though critically acclaimed and widely beloved, the 1992 animated “Aladdin” feature had some serious issues with stereotyping.

Disney wanted to avoid repeating these same problems in the live action version of...

Read more: How the new 'Aladdin' stacks up against a century of Hollywood stereotyping

Assange’s new indictment: Espionage and the First Amendment

  • Written by Ofer Raban, Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Oregon

Julian Assange, the co-founder of WikiLeaks, has been charged by the U.S. Department of Justice with a slew of Espionage Act violations that could keep him in prison for the rest of his life.

The new indictment expands an earlier one charging Assange with conspiring with Chelsea Manning, the former soldier convicted of leaking classified documents...

Read more: Assange’s new indictment: Espionage and the First Amendment

Rapid water quality tests better protect beachgoers

  • Written by Rachel Noble, Professor of Environmental Sciences and Engineering and Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Fast tests can help keep people out of the water when it's unsafe, and let them back in sooner once the coast is clear.Paul Fisher, CC BY-ND

Planning a trip to the beach? Along with looking forward to some summer fun, beachgoers may be thinking about the safety of their waterfront destination. Will the water be clean enough for swimming, surfing,...

Read more: Rapid water quality tests better protect beachgoers

Doping soldiers so they fight better – is it ethical?

  • Written by Maxwell Mehlman, Professor of Biomedical Ethics, Case Western Reserve University
A waxwork of Captain America on display at Madame Tussauds in Bangkok, Thailand. Nuamfolio/Shutterstock.com

The military is constantly using technology to build better ships, warplanes, guns and armor. Shouldn’t it also use drugs to build better soldiers?

Soldiers have long taken drugs to help them fight. Amphetamines like Dexedrine were...

Read more: Doping soldiers so they fight better – is it ethical?

More Articles ...

  1. Water stays in the pipes longer in shrinking cities – a challenge for public health
  2. 'World Heritage' site selection is Eurocentric – and that shapes which historic places get love and money
  3. People with traumatic brain injury, who often lose empathy, can regain it with treatment
  4. Mathematics of scale: Big, small and everything in between
  5. As Airbnb grows, this is exactly how much it's bringing down hotel prices and occupancy
  6. The history of China's Muslims and what's behind their persecution
  7. Facebook doesn't fool me – but I worry about how it affects you
  8. Recent attempts at reparations show that World War II is not over
  9. Chicago's Urban Prep Academy – known for 100% college acceptance rates – put reputation ahead of results
  10. US is already fighting a conflict with Iran – an economic war that is hurting the wrong people
  11. Could a lack of humility be at the root of what ails America?
  12. The Constitution dictates that impeachment must not be partisan
  13. The American GI in WWII, uncensored
  14. I'm an evolutionary biologist – here's why this ancient fungal fossil discovery is so revealing
  15. Genetic trigger discovered for common heart problem, mitral valve prolapse
  16. The Catholic Church is tightening rules on reporting sexual abuse – but not swearing off its legal privilege to keep secrets
  17. What’s wrong with those anti-vaxxers? They're just like the rest of us
  18. How rural areas like Florida's Panhandle can become more hurricane-ready
  19. The SAT's new 'adversity score' is a poor fix for a problematic test
  20. How dogs help keep multiracial neighborhoods socially segregated
  21. What China wants: 3 things motivating China's position in trade negotiations with the US
  22. An outlaw yeast thrives with genetic chaos – and could provide clues for understanding cancer growth
  23. Hate heaped on black heroines of the French Resistance would look familiar to AOC and Rashida Tlaib
  24. Simply elegant, Morse code marks 175 years and counting
  25. Getting ready for hurricane season: 4 essential reads
  26. Women take a hit for reporting sexual harassment, but #MeToo may be changing that
  27. Misreading the story of climate change and the Maya
  28. How millennials are affecting the price of your home
  29. What your ability to engage with stories says about your real-life relationships
  30. There is more than one religious view on abortion - here's what Jewish texts say
  31. New autism research on single neurons suggests signaling problems in brain circuits
  32. States – not just Congress – should unlock student financial aid for people in prison
  33. Phage therapy to prevent cholera infections – and possibly those caused by other deadly bacteria
  34. What's behind the belief in a soulmate?
  35. Hydropower dams can harm coastal areas far downstream
  36. The US could have ended up with a British-style health care system: Here is why it didn’t
  37. Viruses to stop cholera infections – the viral enemy of deadly bacteria could be humanity's friend
  38. Why Congress needs to empower the IRS to give nonprofit newspapers a green light
  39. Same-sex couples have been in American politics way longer than the Buttigiegs have been married
  40. Political cartoonists are out of touch – it's time to make way for memes
  41. Why letting the IRS decide the future of news is a bad idea
  42. Why is the Pentagon interested in UFOs?
  43. 'The Big Bang Theory' finale: Sheldon and Amy's fictional physics parallels real science
  44. The Brown v. Board of Education case didn't start how you think it did
  45. Congress is considering privacy legislation – be afraid
  46. Populist alliances of 'cowboys and Indians' are protecting rural lands
  47. Why are there so many candidates for president?
  48. Doris Day was a sunny actress and a domestic violence survivor; are there lessons?
  49. 21 questions for today's college graduates
  50. Laser of sound promises to measure extremely tiny phenomena