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Study calls for responsible academic research assessment

Findings from a landmark study that could have major implications for the future of academic research assessment have been published by researchers in the University of Glasgow's Adam Smith Business School.

Want to solve a complex problem? Applied math can help

You can probably think of a time when you've used math to solve an everyday problem, such as calculating a tip at a restaurant or determining the square footage of a room. But what role does math play in solving complex problems ...

Study suggests simple steps that may improve team ethics

Instead of ending a group meeting asking if anyone has any questions, a professor at UT Arlington suggests asking participants if they can think of anything that might go wrong with the plan discussed.

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Education
Anti-bullying, sexual harassment resources increase in US schools but gaps remain
Economics & Business
Study finds strong link between childhood opportunities and educational attainment, earnings as a young adult
Education
Citizens' panels help young people with special needs, disabilities make their voices heard on life-affecting policies
Social Sciences
Gender equity paradox: Study finds sex differences in reading and science are largest in gender-equal countries
Education
Climate change is easier to study when it's presented as a game, says researcher
Education
Fostering a love of stories in a child's first years is key to lifelong reading, says researcher
Education
Palestinian education 'under attack', leaving a generation close to losing hope, study warns
Education
California becomes latest state to restrict student smartphone use at school
Education
Six initiatives for prioritizing undergraduate student well-being
Education
Violence, harassment from students is overwhelmingly 'part of the job' for Saskatchewan education sector workers
Economics & Business
Colleges barred from offering money to student-athletes are offering them multimillion-dollar coaches instead
Education
Q&A: What's behind the ban on cell phones in K-12 schools?
Economics & Business
Goodwill created a new high school for dropouts—it led to better jobs and higher wages
Education
Educators and parents reveal culture of fear, censorship, and loss of learning opportunities in wake of FL policies
Education
Expanding Earth science education beyond traditional field trips
Social Sciences
Learning mindset could be key to addressing medical students' alarming burnout
Education
Study reveals impact of homework on student achievement in math and science
Education
Clones in the classroom: Why universities must be wary of embracing AI-driven teaching tools
Education
Enrollment of undocumented students at California universities dropped from 2016 to 2023, finds study
Education
Study hints that debate skills may lessen negative impact of AI

Other news

Plants & Animals
Study suggests elephants remember zookeepers after many years
Nanomaterials
New insights into bubble interference could enhance electrode design
General Physics
Nobel Prize in physics awarded to 2 scientists for discoveries that enabled machine learning
Earth Sciences
Research suggests Earth's oldest continental crust is disintegrating
Environment
New research shows legal challenges to climate action on the rise
Molecular & Computational biology
Nanopore technique shows transport mechanism of chaperone proteins at the single-molecule level
Earth Sciences
New global database of dams and reservoirs could transform water management
Molecular & Computational biology
Key molecule in wound healing identified through mapping of long non-coding RNA molecules
Biochemistry
Researchers design a drug capable of acting simultaneously against three different therapeutic targets
General Physics
Physics team uncovers a quantum Mpemba effect with a host of 'cool' implications
General Physics
Detecting Planck-scale dark matter by leveraging quantum interference
Archaeology
Tunisian snail remains provide insights on a possible 7700-year-old local food tradition
Archaeology
With advanced scanning technique, confiscated Iron Age Iranian swords proven to be pastiches
Ecology
Study reveals how parasites thrive by balancing specialization with exploiting diverse species communities
Plants & Animals
Mexican jumping beans jump to safety in a dynamic world—light could influence how moth larvae avoid extreme heat
Astrobiology
Ryugu sample analyses show asteroids may have delivered compounds needed to start life on Earth
Nanophysics
Reducing energy loss in metal nanostructures by altering geometrical dimensions
Plants & Animals
Documenting the impact of a fungal outbreak on a forest over half a century
Plasma Physics
Neural networks boost fusion research with rapid ion temperature and rotation velocity predictions
Planetary Sciences
Webb allows researchers to use new method of finding atmospheres in distant planets

COVID-19 disruptions hurt schoolkids the most

This month the few remaining countries in East Asia and the Pacific that had kept schools shuttered since the COVID-19 outbreak are reopening, some on a limited scale.

New research shows learning is more effective when active

Engaging students through interactive activities, discussions, feedback and AI-enhanced technologies resulted in improved academic performance compared to traditional lectures, lessons or readings, faculty from Carnegie Mellon ...

Why charter schools are not as 'public' as they claim to be

Proponents of charter schools insist that they are public schools "open to all students." But the truth is more nuanced. As an education policy researcher—and as author of a new book about charter schools I wrote with fellow ...

Being good at math might help you become great at sports

Following her triumph in the recent US Open tennis tournament, Emma Raducanu was interviewed by Chinese media outlet CGTN and revealed that maths was her favorite subject at school. Raducanu told the interviewer she was ...

Stark divides in parenting attitudes toward education

Middle class parents of school-age children are more likely than working class parents to ask teachers for information regarding their children's education (61 percent versus 46 percent).

The vicious circle of high academic achievement

For some teenagers, the new school year means reuniting with their friends. For others, it means an increase in anxiety and in the pressure to succeed and get good grades. According to researchers at the University of Ottawa, ...