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15 votes
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Schools opened, suicide attempts in girls skyrocketed
8 votes -
I signed up to write college essays for rich kids. I found cheating is more complicated than I thought.
29 votes -
California high school stripped of basketball title after tortillas were thrown at opposing Latino players
6 votes -
When this high school valedictorian started giving a speech about being queer, the principal took the mic
11 votes -
After the worst school year ever, here's what students want most
7 votes -
Choosing a school in a segregated city
9 votes -
Yearbook photos of girls were altered to hide their chests
21 votes -
California will discourage students who are gifted at math
16 votes -
Proctoring tools and dragnet investigations rob students of due process
19 votes -
Relative student ability is remarkably static and predictable from pre-K to college and beyond
17 votes -
In Finland, high-quality free school meals are provided to all children between six and sixteen as a public service – students everywhere deserve the same
8 votes -
Defrauded students to receive loan forgiveness
9 votes -
Beer company Natty Light is the unlikely force behind the 'Da Vinci of Debt', now on view in Grand Central Station
11 votes -
America will sacrifice anything for the college experience
8 votes -
“I feel that the future I’ve been working towards my whole life is gone now” — What United States college students have to say about the coronavirus
15 votes -
Here’s how Cornell kept low covid-19 rates on campus
5 votes -
A million students and counting have learned Linux
9 votes -
College newspaper reporters are the journalism heroes for the pandemic era
5 votes -
The Bully's Pulpit - On the elementary structure of domination
3 votes -
Are illegal strikes justified?
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state...
This question is inspired by the university of Michigan's grad student union's announcement that it will strike this week. As noted in the university's response Michigan state law prohibits state employees from striking and GEO's contract with UofM (signed in April) has a clause that prohibits work stoppages.
Are strikes performed in violation of the law (state or otherwise) or a contract justified? Why or why not?
22 votes -
A math problem stumped experts for fifty years. This grad student from Maine solved it in days
19 votes -
Are philosophical classics too difficult for students?
4 votes -
US universities seek ways to protect students and faculty from being prosecuted by Chinese authorities
7 votes -
Harvard, MIT sue US immigration authorities over new rule for foreign students
23 votes -
Sixteen-year-old student gets thousands of primary school children to write to lonely care home residents
7 votes -
ICE announces modifications to international student policies amid coronavirus pandemic
8 votes -
US pediatricians call for in-person school this fall
12 votes -
Schools turn to surveillance tech to prevent Covid-19 spread: "We are very much interested in the automated tracking of students"
6 votes -
Colleges face student lawsuits seeking refunds after coronavirus closures
12 votes -
Education without loans
5 votes -
California police used military surveillance tech at grad student strike
11 votes -
Ask a cosmology PhD student (almost) anything!
Hi all, I am a PhD student focusing in cosmology. I wanted to up the science content here on Tildes, and I thought that one way to do so is to have an informal little Q&A session. As such, feel...
Hi all,
I am a PhD student focusing in cosmology. I wanted to up the science content here on Tildes, and I thought that one way to do so is to have an informal little Q&A session. As such, feel free to use this post to ask any questions you might have about cosmology specifically, and physics in general.
This may not be as exciting as some other science AMAs given that I am a rather early graduate student, so there may be a lot of questions I don't know the answer to. However, I'm willing to try my best and answer over the next few days, and to let you know I don't know if I don't!
A bit about myself: I did my undergraduate degree at the University of Chicago where I studied physics and mathematics, and then I was a student researcher in a computational cosmology group at a national lab. I subsequently enrolled at UC Davis to continue studying cosmology. Ask me anything about physics, cosmology, or high performance computing!
I also invite anyone else with expertise to chime in as well!
23 votes -
Exam anxiety: How remote test-proctoring is creeping students out
9 votes -
Many schools are already closed until the end of the year. So what happens to all those missed classes?
11 votes -
Why do so few people major in computer science?
15 votes -
Social Security recipients who don’t usually file tax returns will automatically get $1,200 payments, Treasury says in reversal
6 votes -
Social Security recipients who don’t usually file tax returns will automatically get $1,200 payments, Treasury says in reversal
11 votes -
Small colleges were already on the brink. Now, coronavirus threatens their existence.
4 votes -
Lambda School's misleading promises
8 votes -
Professor loses landmark legal battle after claiming it’s ‘free speech’ to deliberately misgender trans students
23 votes -
Students say the Lambda School coding bootcamp isn't delivering on its promises, with concerns about poor instruction and prospects while being bound by income-sharing agreements
16 votes -
With great tech comes great responsibility - A student guide for navigating ethical issues in the tech industry
9 votes -
Colleges are turning students’ phones into surveillance machines, tracking the locations of hundreds of thousands
35 votes -
Rhode Island lawsuit: Students sue for the right to learn civics
16 votes -
ABBA's Björn Ulvaeus has gifted books to high school students across Sweden to try to stem the flow of fake news
8 votes -
A rural South Australian council is asking a group of high school students for input on how to spend $1 million in drought relief
8 votes -
FTC settlement with for-profit University of Phoenix over deceptive advertising will require them to cancel $141M in student debt and pay $50M to former students
14 votes -
A powerful statement of resistance from a college student on trial in Moscow
12 votes -
In terms of reading test score points per hour of learning, Finnish students came out on top, followed by kids in Germany and Sweden
5 votes