10/03/2025
The Power of Multimodal Learning (in 5 Charts)
When students engage multiple senses to learn—drawing or acting out a concept, for example—they’re more likely to remember and develop a deeper understanding of the material, a large body of research shows.
07/03/2025
How to create an ideal learning environment for children? Learn more about the ways in which fun and educational games can be maximized to benefit your children! https://loom.ly/HgU5a08
07/03/2025
Teaching Young Students How to Overcome Cognitive Overload
Teachers can help students develop the metacognitive skills to avoid becoming overwhelmed by school demands.
27/01/2025
Screens have taken over classrooms. Even students have had enough.
🔗 https://on.wsj.com/40K4iRB
Kindergartners now watch math lessons on YouTube, counting aloud with the videos. Middle-schoolers complete writing drills on Chromebooks while sneaking in play of an online game. High-schoolers mark up Google Docs to finish group projects.
The rapid tech transformation amounts to a grand experiment playing out in American schools.
14/01/2025
Agatha Christie's life took a dramatic turn in 1926. At the age of thirty-five, she was plunged into despair by the loss of her mother and the betrayal of her husband, Archie, who left her for another woman. This double blow sent her spiraling into a deep depression, leaving her feeling utterly lost and disillusioned. The only solace she found was in the love of her seven-year-old daughter, Rosalind.
Born into wealth and privilege in 1890, Agatha had shown a remarkable talent for writing from a young age. She married Archie Christie, a dashing pilot, in 1914. Together, they weathered the storms of World War I and welcomed their daughter in 1919. By the time her marriage began to unravel, Agatha had already established herself as a successful author with five acclaimed detective novels.
As she slowly emerged from the shadows of her failed marriage, Agatha turned to writing as a source of comfort and escape. A journey on the Orient Express offered a brief respite, but it was an archaeological dig in Iraq in 1930 that truly transformed her life. There, she met Max Mallowan, a younger archaeologist, and their love story blossomed. They married later that year and embarked on a lifelong partnership filled with love, adventure, and intellectual companionship.
The year 1926, a year of immense pain and uncertainty, marked a turning point in Agatha Christie's life. In the decades that followed, she would go on to become one of history's most celebrated authors, penning over 70 best-selling novels and creating the longest-running play ever staged. Her second marriage brought her happiness, and both she and Max received prestigious honors: Max was knighted in 1968, and Agatha was made a Dame of the British Empire in 1971.
Agatha Christie passed away on January 12, 1976, at the age of 85. With over two billion copies of her books sold worldwide, she remains the best-selling novelist of all time. Her enduring legacy is a testament to her resilience, her extraordinary talent, and her ability to turn adversity into triumph.
13/01/2025
A new investigation found that a surge in AI-generated commentary is flooding academic journals and compromising research integrity.
A joint investigation by Science and Retraction Watch uncovered the extent of the problem, revealing that it now makes up 70% of the content in Elsevier’s Oral Oncology Reports and 50% of Wolters Kluwer’s International Journal of Surgery Open.
Once a modest component of academic literature, these pieces now dominate journals. At Neurosurgical Review, this type of content comprised 58% of the total output from January to October — up from just 9% last year
More than 80% of these commentaries are from South Asian countries and appear to be machine-generated, lack substantive relevance, and include self-citations to manipulate metrics such as impact factor and institutional rankings.
For authors, these commentaries offer a quick route to publication, as they do not require original data and often bypass rigorous peer review. Journals also benefit financially, as many charge publication fees for these articles.
However, the practice is undermining scholarly standards.
As AI tools make it easier than ever to generate such content, the need for tighter editorial scrutiny has never been more urgent. Without intervention, the academic community risks losing trust in the metrics that underpin research quality and impact.
Learn more: https://www.science.org/content/article/shoddy-commentaries-quick-and-dirty-route-higher-impact-numbers-are-rise
26/12/2024
About 2200 years ago, Eratosthenes, a Greek librarian in Alexandria, Egypt, determined the Earth's circumference.
He observed the difference in the angle of the sun's rays at noon on the summer solstice in two different locations (Alexandria and Syene), and in doing so observed the curvature of the Earth – using 'sticks, eyes, feet.... plus a zest for experiments'.
Carl Sagan, cosmologist and humanist, at his finest. 👇