Massachusetts could be the next state to get rid of the ‘subminimum wage’ for tipped workers
Jeannette Wicks-Lim, UMass Amherst and Jasmine Kerrissey, UMass Amherst
Election anxiety doesn’t need to win − here are 3 science-backed strategies from a clinical psychologist to rein in the stress
Shannon Sauer-Zavala, University of Kentucky
How to overcome your device dependency and manage a successful digital detox
Kelley Cours Anderson, College of Charleston and Karen Anne Wallach, University of Alabama in Huntsville
US government tries to rein in an out-of-control subscription economy
David Arditi, University of Texas at Arlington
Jobs report gives a final lackluster snapshot prior to election − but overall, the economy under Biden has been a tale of 2 eras
Christopher Decker, University of Nebraska Omaha
St. Augustine was no stranger to culture wars – and has something to say about today’s
Michael Lamb, Wake Forest University
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‘Safe route’ or ‘sushi route’ − 2 strategies to turn yuck to yum and convince people to eat unusual foods
Alexandra Plakias, Hamilton College
Sudan’s civil war has left at least 62,000 dead by our estimate − but the true figure could be far higher
Sarah Elizabeth Scales, University of Nebraska Medical Center; Blake Erhardt-Ohren, University of California, Berkeley; Debarati Guha Sapir, Université catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain); Khidir Dalouk, Oregon Health & Science University, and Rohini J Haar, University of California, Berkeley
Mexico’s Day of the Dead celebrations blend Indigenous customs and European thinking in surprising ways
Ezekiel Stear, Auburn University
No, America’s battery plant boom isn’t going bust – construction is on track for the biggest factories, with over 23,000 jobs planned
James Morton Turner, Wellesley College; Joshua Busby, The University of Texas at Austin, and Nathan Jensen, The University of Texas at Austin
Monkeys know who will win the election – primal instincts humans share with them shape voters’ choices
Michael Platt, University of Pennsylvania
The colonial legacy lurking beneath economic unrest in the French Caribbean
David A. Vivian, Soka University of America
For one survivor, the 1920 Election Day massacre in Florida was ‘the night the devil got loose’
Jerald Podair, Lawrence University
Trump’s Detroit insults are based on old narratives local media are rewriting every day
Danielle K. Brown, Michigan State University
Elon Musk misses Philly court date, stalling ‘illegal lottery’ case against him − an expert on Philadelphia politics weighs in
Richardson Dilworth, Drexel University
Try this week’s news quiz
Fritz Holznagel, The Conversation's quizmaster
International election monitors can help boost people’s trust in the electoral process − but not all work the same way
Sarah Bush, University of Pennsylvania and Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
Who formally declares the winner of the US presidential election?
Amy Dacey, American University
‘Each bears his own ghosts’: How the classics speak to these days of fear, anger and presidential candidates stalking the land
Rachel Hadas, Rutgers University - Newark
With Tucker Carlson, Elon Musk and Donald Trump, Republicans’ ‘strict father’ has become the creepy uncle
Karrin Vasby Anderson, Colorado State University
Americans own guns to protect themselves from psychological as well as physical threats
Nick Buttrick, University of Wisconsin-Madison
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The candidates' records
The next president will play a key role in shaping US trade policy – here’s what voters need to know
Bedassa Tadesse, University of Minnesota Duluth
What the presidential candidates have done − and where they stand − on education
Robert Shand, American University
Why vote for Harris or Trump? A cheat sheet on the candidates’ records, why their supporters like them and why picking one or the other makes sense
Amy Lieberman, The Conversation
On foreign policy, Trump opts for disruption and Harris for engagement − but they share some of the same concerns
Garret Martin, American University School of International Service
Harris and Trump differ widely on gun rights, death penalty and other civil liberties questions
Donovan A. Watts, Auburn University
Election 2024
How Trump’s racist talk of immigrant ‘bad genes’ echoes some of the last century’s darkest ideas about eugenics
Shannon Bow O'Brien, The University of Texas at Austin
Rust Belt voters aren’t all white, but election coverage of the region often ignores the concerns of people of color there
Christabel Devadoss, Middle Tennessee State University
Fear, hope and the economy: what is motivating Americans as they decide who to vote for – podcast
Gemma Ware, The Conversation and Naomi Schalit, The Conversation
A new president will be elected − but it may take some time to determine who wins
John M. Murphy, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Slow vote-counting, flip-flopping leads, careful certification and the weirdness of the Electoral College – people who research elections look at what to expect on election night
Jeff Inglis, The Conversation
Are you an academic expert who wants to share your knowledge?
Time to freak out? How the existential terror of hurricanes can fuel climate change denial
Jamie Goldenberg, University of South Florida; Emily P. Courtney, University of South Florida, and Joshua Hart, Union College
Beyond bottled water and sandwiches: What FEMA is doing to get hurricane victims back into their homes
Shannon Van Zandt, Texas A&M University and Walter Gillis Peacock, Texas A&M University
Colonialism’s legacy has left Caribbean nations much more vulnerable to hurricanes
Farah Nibbs, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
How Hurricane Helene became a deadly disaster across six states
Cary Mock, University of South Carolina
People displaced by hurricanes face anxiety and a long road to recovery, US census surveys show
Trevor Memmott, UMass Boston and Christian Weller, UMass Boston
International
Israel’s ban on UNRWA continues a pattern of politicizing Palestinian refugee aid – and puts millions of lives at risk
Nicholas R. Micinski, University of Maine and Kelsey Norman, Rice University
Foreign countries are helping autocracies repress exiled dissidents in return for economic gain
Rebecca Cordell, University of Pittsburgh and Kashmiri Medhi, University of Texas at Dallas
Israel’s latest strike against Iran may actually de-escalate regional tensions – for now, at least
Javed Ali, University of Michigan
Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar’s death is a defining moment, but it will not end the war
Ian Parmeter, Australian National University
How we solved the mystery of the pink sand on South Australia’s beaches – podcast
Gemma Ware, The Conversation
New research in health and science
In Hawaii, parasites and viruses team up in the battle against fruit flies – an entomologist explains the implication for global pest control
Kelsey Coffman, University of Tennessee
Grow fast, die young? Animals that invest in building high-quality biomaterials may slow aging and increase their lifespans
Chen Hou, Missouri University of Science and Technology
People with blindness and low vision are squeezed by high costs of living − new research
Zachary Morris, Stony Brook University (The State University of New York)
Tiny airborne particles within air pollution could be a silent killer – new study uncovers hidden risks and reveals who’s most at risk in New York state
Shao Lin, University at Albany, State University of New York; Arshad Arjunan Nair, University at Albany, State University of New York; Fangqun Yu, University at Albany, State University of New York, and Quan Qi, University at Albany, State University of New York
Women are at a higher risk of dying from heart disease − in part because doctors don’t take major sex and gender differences into account
Amy Huebschmann, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus and Judith Regensteiner, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
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Misinformation is more than just bad facts: How and why people spread rumors is key to understanding how false information travels and takes root
Kate Starbird, University of Washington and Stephen Prochaska, University of Washington
Threatening ‘the enemy within’ with force: Military ethicists explain the danger to important American traditions
Marcus Hedahl, United States Naval Academy and Bradley Jay Strawser, Naval Postgraduate School
From Confederate general to Cherokee heritage: Why returning the name Kuwohi to the Great Smoky Mountains matters
Seth T. Kannarr, University of Tennessee and Derek H. Alderman, University of Tennessee
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As more Americans go ‘no contact’ with their parents, they live out a dilemma at the heart of Shakespeare’s ‘King Lear’
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In education, academic rigor tends to be defined in two different ways: as a workload that is demanding and difficult or as learning experiences that challenge and support students to think more deeply. Give…
A no homework policy doesn't help prepare for this aspect of college, but neither do highly structured daily graded assignments, which are standard fare for high school and what many …
A Stanford education researcher found that too much homework can negatively affect kids, especially their lives away from school, where family, friends and activities matter.
Although the no-homework trend may sound alarming, especially to parents dreaming of their child’s acceptance to Harvard, Stanford or Yale, there is mounting evidence that eliminating homework in grade school may actually …
Homework helps students of all ages build critical study abilities that help them throughout their academic careers. Learning at home also encourages the development of good research habits while encouraging …
College can still be rigorous without a lot of homework. by Kc Culver, The Conversation. Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain. How hard should it be to earn a college degree? When...
No homework. Grades you can change. This school is challenging everything about our approach to education - and it’s working with a 98% college acceptance rate.
Students at Pangburn's school have a 50-minute silent period during regular school hours where homework can be started, and where teachers pull individual or small groups of students aside for tutoring, often on …