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Amanda Gorman's poetry shows why spoken word belongs in school

  • Written by Kathleen M. Alley, Associate Professor of Literacy, Mississippi State University
imageAmerican poet Amanda Gorman reads a poem during the 59th presidential inauguration at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 20, 2021. Patrick Semansky/POOL/AFP via Getty Images

Editor’s note: Not long after Amanda Gorman recited one of her poems at the inauguration of President Joe Biden on Jan. 20, three of her forthcoming books skyrocketed to three of...

Read more: Amanda Gorman's poetry shows why spoken word belongs in school

Why disputes between Congress and the White House so often end up in court

  • Written by Sarah Burns, Associate Professor of Political Science, Rochester Institute of Technology
imageThe three branches of U.S. government often find themselves in tension.White House, Eric Kiser; Capitol, John Xavier; Supreme Court, Architect of the Capitol, CC BY-SA

When the executive and legislative branches of the U.S. government don’t agree, especially on thorny, politically charged issues such as reproductive rights and immigration...

Read more: Why disputes between Congress and the White House so often end up in court

Bringing Mars rocks back to Earth – Perseverance Rover lands on Feb. 18, a lead scientist explains the tech and goals

  • Written by Jim Bell, Professor of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University
imageGetting Martian rocks and samples back to Earth is the primary goal of the Mars 2020 mission.NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

Editor’s note: Jim Bell is a professor in the School of Earth and Space Exploration at Arizona State University and has worked on a number of Mars missions. On Feb. 18, NASA’s Mars 2020 mission will be arriving at the red...

Read more: Bringing Mars rocks back to Earth – Perseverance Rover lands on Feb. 18, a lead scientist explains...

North Korea targeted cybersecurity researchers using a blend of hacking and espionage

  • Written by Paulo Shakarian, Associate Professor of Computer Science, Arizona State University
imageNorth Korea has a long history of hacking targets in the U.S.Chris Price/Flickr, CC BY-ND

North Korean hackers have staged an audacious attack targeting cybersecurity researchers, many of whom work to counter hackers from places like North Korea, Russia, China and Iran. The attack involved sophisticated efforts to deceive specific people, which...

Read more: North Korea targeted cybersecurity researchers using a blend of hacking and espionage

How some drugs can turn into a cancer-causing chemical in the body

  • Written by C. Michael White, Distinguished Professor and Head of the Department of Pharmacy Practice, University of Connecticut
imagePharmaceutical companies recalled metformin, a type II diabetes drug, after high levels of impurities of NDMA, a known carcinogen, were found in the tablets.Scott Olson via Getty Images

When consumers get a prescription drug from the pharmacy, they assume that it’s been tested and is safe to use. But what if a drug changes in harmful ways as...

Read more: How some drugs can turn into a cancer-causing chemical in the body

These are the students free community college programs help the most

  • Written by Amy Li, Assistant Professor of Educational Policy Studies, Florida International University
image'College promise' programs increase Black and Hispanic female college student enrollment the most. FG Trade/E+ via Getty Images

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

The big idea

College programs that help cover tuition and fees significantly increase how many Black, Latino and white students enter college, according to...

Read more: These are the students free community college programs help the most

What a squeezed rubber ducky suggests about the lingering effects of vaccine misinformation

  • Written by Xingru Chen, Ph.D. Candidate in Applied Mathematics, Dartmouth College
imageBelieve it or not, this little guy has inspired new scientific thought about the COVID-19 vaccine.Peter Dazeley via Getty Images

The mutations in the coronavirus indicate that the virus is working hard to survive, with transmissible COVID-19 variants being detected around the world. These mutations have increased the urgency of vaccinating hundreds...

Read more: What a squeezed rubber ducky suggests about the lingering effects of vaccine misinformation

Citizen scientists are filling research gaps created by the pandemic

  • Written by Theresa Crimmins, Director, USA National Phenology Network, University of Arizona
imageA volunteer looks for waterbirds at Point Reyes National Seashore in California during the National Audubon Society's annual Christmas Bird Count.Kerry W/Flickr, CC BY

The rapid spread of COVID-19 in 2020 disrupted field research and environmental monitoring efforts worldwide. Travel restrictions and social distancing forced scientists to cancel...

Read more: Citizen scientists are filling research gaps created by the pandemic

The US government's $44 million vaccine rollout website was a predictable mess – here’s how to fix the broken process behind it

  • Written by Tinglong Dai, Associate Professor of Operations Management & Business Analytics, Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing
imageA health system in Virginia stopped using the federal website after only a few days, complaining that it was slow and crashed.Michael S. Williamson/The Washington Post via Getty Images

The COVID-19 vaccine rollout has been a nightmare for many Americans as they struggle through multi-step registration and appointment systems.

The federal government...

Read more: The US government's $44 million vaccine rollout website was a predictable mess – here’s how to fix...

Can an employee object to mandatory COVID-19 vaccines on religious grounds?

  • Written by Debbie Kaminer, Professor of Law, Baruch College, CUNY
imageMany employers are hoping vaccines provide 'a shot in the arm,' but can staff opt out?David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

The rollout of vaccines across the U.S. has finally given hope to many employers of a return to some form of normality.

Although the program has gotten off to a faltering start, the promise that hundreds of millions...

Read more: Can an employee object to mandatory COVID-19 vaccines on religious grounds?

More Articles ...

  1. Living with natural gas pipelines: Appalachian landowners describe fear, anxiety and loss
  2. 5 ways the Biden administration may help stem the loss of international students
  3. One year on, Muslim women reflect on wearing the niqab in a mask-wearing world
  4. To defuse political violence across US, conflict mediators apply lessons from gang disputes and foreign elections
  5. What The Weeknd's changing face says about our sick celebrity culture
  6. Loss of muscle mass among elderly can lead to falls, and staying put during the pandemic doesn't help
  7. How Bezos and Amazon changed the world
  8. How food banks help Americans who have trouble getting enough to eat
  9. What is food insecurity?
  10. The Biden administration can eliminate food insecurity in the United States – here's how
  11. Coronavirus variants, viral mutation and COVID-19 vaccines: The science you need to understand
  12. How Connecticut's schools have managed to maintain lunch distribution for kids who need it most during the COVID-19 pandemic
  13. 3 ways Black people say their white co-workers and managers can support them and be an antidote to systemic racism
  14. Strong political institutions can uphold democracy, even if people can't agree on politics
  15. No, you are not addicted to your digital device, but you may have a habit you want to break
  16. How can I get the COVID-19 vaccine? Here's what you need to know and which state strategies are working
  17. Why rituals are important survival tools during the COVID-19 pandemic
  18. Israel faces legal – and practical – obligations for including Palestinians in vaccine success
  19. People may become less likely to contribute to a virtual public good like Wikipedia or Waze if they know many others are already doing it
  20. Could a human enter a black hole to study it?
  21. Navalny returns to Russia and brings anti-Putin politics with him
  22. Stuck inside your home this Groundhog Day? Be like Phil the weatherman, and try some mindfulness
  23. Social accounting includes looking beyond the bare numbers of racial diversity
  24. Congress could use an arcane section of the 14th Amendment to hold Trump accountable for Capitol attack
  25. What those mourning the fragility of American democracy get wrong
  26. Espionage attempts like the SolarWinds hack are inevitable, so it's safer to focus on defense – not retaliation
  27. How age diversity in a presidential Cabinet could affect policies and programs
  28. To make less-harmful road salts, we're studying natural antifreezes produced by fish
  29. As scientists turn their attention to COVID-19, other research is not getting done – and that can have lasting consequences
  30. 10 parenting strategies to reduce your kids' pandemic stress
  31. Teaching about pandemics and inequality while living through those realities
  32. Don't blame Fox News for the attack on the Capitol
  33. Anosmia, the loss of smell caused by COVID-19, doesn't always go away quickly – but smell training may help
  34. Why GameStop shares stopped trading: 5 questions answered
  35. Weed withdrawal: More than half of people using medical cannabis for pain experience withdrawal symptoms
  36. Trump wasn't the first president to try to politicize the civil service – which remains at risk of returning to Jackson's 'spoils system'
  37. COVID-19 misinformation on Chinese social media – lessons for countering conspiracy theories
  38. Why using fear to promote COVID-19 vaccination and mask wearing could backfire
  39. To make the US auto fleet greener, increasing fuel efficiency matters more than selling electric vehicles
  40. Thawing permafrost is full of ice-forming particles that could get into atmosphere
  41. Travelers coming from Italy may have driven first US COVID-19 wave more than those from China, study suggests
  42. Why it takes 2 shots to make mRNA vaccines do their antibody-creating best – and what the data shows on delaying the booster dose
  43. A universal influenza vaccine may be one step closer, bringing long-lasting protection against flu
  44. Why the next major hurdle to ending the pandemic will be about persuading people to get vaccinated
  45. Can Biden fix the vaccine mess? An expert says yes
  46. 5 websites to help educate about the horrors of the Holocaust
  47. Biden faces the world: 5 foreign policy experts explain US priorities – and problems – after Trump
  48. People take better care of public places when they feel like they have a stake in them
  49. Expert in fluid dynamics explains how to reduce the risk of COVID-19 airborne transmission inside a car
  50. The problem with India's 'love jihad' laws