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Is the spelling bee success of Indian-Americans a legacy of British colonialism?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageSpeller Jairam Hathwar from Painted Post, New York in the championship round of the 2016 National Spelling Bee.Shalini Shankar, CC BY

When spellers win the Scripps National Spelling Bee, audiences always want to know their secret. Yet this question seems to be asked far more in recent years in response to an Indian-American winning streak.

South...

Read more: Is the spelling bee success of Indian-Americans a legacy of British colonialism?

What the new overtime rules mean for you and your boss

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Earlier this month, the Department of Labor outlined changes to the existing overtime exemptions.

As you are probably aware, some employees are exempt from being paid overtime, meaning their employers don’t have to pay them extra when they work over 40 hours in a week. The Fair Labor Standards Act outlines the criteria for this exemption.

Emplo...

Read more: What the new overtime rules mean for you and your boss

In America, domestic extremists are a bigger risk than foreign terrorism

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Take America back from those who have stolen it. Protect America from those who want to destroy it. Restore the principles that these usurpers betrayed.

These are the messages that have defined the GOP presidential race. They have been used for the past eight years to justify obstruction of the Obama administration, and are now being used to paint...

Read more: In America, domestic extremists are a bigger risk than foreign terrorism

Unlocking the secrets of bacterial biofilms – to use against them

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIt's bacterial biofilms that give the Grand Prismatic Spring its colorful hues.Karin Sauer, CC BY-ND

Standing on a walkway at Yellowstone National Park, I admired the hues of orange, blue and yellow in the sand of the Grand Prismatic Spring. A small sign nearby read “bacterial mats.” Visitors to Yellowstone may have noticed similar...

Read more: Unlocking the secrets of bacterial biofilms – to use against them

Perspectives on antibiotic resistance: how we got here, where we're headed

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

On May 26, researchers at Walter Reed National Military Medical Centers reported that they had detected bacteria with a gene that makes it resistant to colistin, the antibiotic of last resort. The news has health officials and scientists deeply concerned because this is the first time that the gene, called MCR-1, has been identified in the United...

Read more: Perspectives on antibiotic resistance: how we got here, where we're headed

Inside ISIS' looted antiquities trade

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
image

For excavators – archaeologists, but also looters like the Islamic State, or ISIS – the opportunity for discovery in modern Iraq and Syria is dazzling.

The countries lie within the Fertile Crescent, a broad swath of land stretching from the eastern Mediterranean to the Zagros Mountains and the Persian Gulf that gave rise to some of the...

Read more: Inside ISIS' looted antiquities trade

More Articles ...

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  2. Should prostitution be decriminalized?
  3. Why it's easier to be prescribed an opioid painkiller than the treatment for opioid addiction
  4. Science communication training should be about more than just how to transmit knowledge
  5. How much money is ISIS actually making from looted art?
  6. How computing power can help us look deep within our bodies, and even the Earth
  7. Cities can prepare for hurricane season by reforming shortsighted and outdated laws
  8. Sometimes the best medicine for a veteran is the company of another veteran
  9. The backwards history of attitudes toward public breastfeeding
  10. Security risks in the age of smart homes
  11. Starting college? Here's why you should think about a gap year
  12. Restoring the Everglades will benefit both humans and nature
  13. Does billionaire-funded lawsuit against Gawker create playbook for punishing press?
  14. The trillion dollar question Obama left unanswered in Hiroshima
  15. Facial expressions are key to first impressions. What does that mean for people with facial paralysis?
  16. Iran's Rouhani may now control parliament, but do his economic reforms stand a chance?
  17. Finding solitude in an era of perpetual contact
  18. Recreating forests of the past isn't enough to fix our wildfire problems
  19. Is a tuition-free policy enough to ensure college success?
  20. How did public bathrooms get to be separated by sex in the first place?
  21. Impeachment, culture wars and the politics of identity in Brazil
  22. Obama's Asia trip highlights flagging fate of TPP trade deal
  23. Trump's higher ed proposals could leave poor students out of college
  24. The future of personal satellite technology is here – are we ready for it?
  25. Improving patient care by bridging the divide between doctors and data scientists
  26. Which Facebook 'friends' can help you land a job?
  27. How nanotechnology can help us grow more food using less energy and water
  28. After the rediscovery of a 19th-century novel, our view of black female writers is transformed
  29. A trip to be remembered: Obama in Japan and Vietnam
  30. Want to lose weight? Train the brain, not the body
  31. What does it mean for researchers, journalists and the public when secrecy surrounds science?
  32. Why do only some people get 'skin orgasms' from listening to music?
  33. The trillion dollar question nobody is asking the presidential candidates
  34. Worried about arsenic in your baby's rice cereal? There are other foods that can provide essential iron
  35. New political divide on both sides of Atlantic: populists v cosmopolitans
  36. Deciphering the mysterious decline of honey bees
  37. The hefty price of 'study drug' misuse on college campuses
  38. Troubled waters: conflict in the South China Sea explained
  39. We need to know the algorithms the government uses to make important decisions about us
  40. Touch creates a healing bond in health care
  41. Transgender Americans
  42. Obama's trip to Vietnam and Japan isn't just a friendly visit
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  44. Could a tweet or a text increase college enrollment or student achievement?
  45. Wildfires in West have gotten bigger, more frequent and longer since the 1980s
  46. Why we need better ways to cut greenhouse gases from agriculture
  47. Why trans rights nationwide are only a matter of time
  48. Are the high-rolling quants of horse racing our friends or foes?
  49. Is commercial aviation as safe and secure as we're told?
  50. Kennewick Man will be reburied, but quandaries around human remains won't