Archives for 2018

How to Have the Best Possible Student-Supervisor Meeting
News
May 23, 2018

How to Have the Best Possible Student-Supervisor Meeting

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Pair to Receive Economic Statistics’ Shiskin Award 
Impact
May 22, 2018

Pair to Receive Economic Statistics’ Shiskin Award 

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Behavioral Science Can Be Used to Win War with Fake News
News
May 18, 2018

Behavioral Science Can Be Used to Win War with Fake News

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Sweating the Small Stuff: It’s the Facets of Personality That Reveal Larger Truths
Research
May 16, 2018

Sweating the Small Stuff: It’s the Facets of Personality That Reveal Larger Truths

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The Other Dead of 1918

The Other Dead of 1918

Although it won’t see the memorials and centenary events that the World War I Armistice will, it’s worth thinking back to the ravages of the ‘Spanish flu’ of a century ago and the implications that that pandemic of the past has for infections of the future.

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Microsite Offers Content on Mental Health Awareness

Microsite Offers Content on Mental Health Awareness

Sage 2257 Research

In the latest of its monthly series of interdisciplinary microsites addressing important public issues, SAGE Publishing today is offering free access to academic articles that support Mental Health Awareness Week. The week, sponsored by Britain’s Mental Health Foundation, this year is focused on stress (“Are we coping?”), which the collection covers along with the causes, diagnosis, experiences and treatment of mental illness, are the content areas represented in the collection.

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The Value of Big Data Creation

The Value of Big Data Creation

How do firms transform big data and why do firms differ in their abilities to create value from big data? in a research article that tries to find answers to these questions. Jing Zeng and Keith Glaister find “it is not the data itself, or individual data scientists, that generate value creation opportunities. Rather, value creation occurs through the process of data management.”

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Storytelling Boosts Learning in the College Classroom

Storytelling Boosts Learning in the College Classroom

College professors are always looking for ways to help their students feel more engaged and invested in course material. Storytelling gives context to facts and complex concepts that could otherwise be difficult to grasp. This in turn engages students in the curriculum and improves their retention of the material.

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Census, NSF See Proposed Funding Increases in 2019

Census, NSF See Proposed Funding Increases in 2019

Legislation to fund the National Science Foundation and the Bureau of the Census, among many other U.S. government agencies, in the next fiscal year sailed through its first public hearing today in the House of Representatives.

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The US Professoriat and the Limits of Free Speech

The US Professoriat and the Limits of Free Speech

Researches at the University of Florida’s Brechner Center for Freedom of Information have studied the rights of public employees when they speak with the news media. Here, they look specifically at professors at public universities in the United States and find there are broad protections – within limits.

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A Remedy for Broken Science, Or an Attempt to Undercut It?

A Remedy for Broken Science, Or an Attempt to Undercut It?

A report from the National Association of Scholars takes on the reproducibility crisis in science. Not everyone views the group’s motives as pure.

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Reflections of an Activist Scholar: Henry Louis Taylor, Jr.

Reflections of an Activist Scholar: Henry Louis Taylor, Jr.

The University at Buffalo’s Henry Louis Taylor, Jr.’s’s role as an activist, as a scholar (“I am an activist turned scholar, not a scholar turned activist”), an urban planner and an historian, are explored in the wake of him receiving the Marilyn J. Gittell Activist Scholar Award from the Urban Affairs Association.

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