These low-floor, high-ceiling problems support differentiation, challenging all students by encouraging flexible thinking and allowing for multiple solution paths.
The Stop Underrides Act 2.0 is back. Should trucking companies be forced to spend billions armoring their trailers against ...
Experts say the U.S. needs an additional 2 million to 20 million homes to fix the shortfall, underscoring the challenge of ...
The 10th and 12th-grade board exams in Haryana are about to begin. As the exams approach, the tension among students and ...
In a recent article I described a group of individuals objecting to the use of the Hindu Arabic Base 10 Number System taught to students in U.S. public schools as “uninformed.” A couple of people ...
Ryan McDermott, my English professor last semester, said medieval philosopher Thomas Aquinas was considered intelligent because of his ability to memorize and recall long texts verbatim.
When Ryan Boroski opened Google Classroom to grade his students’ five-paragraph essays, he had three other tabs on standby: ...
Kevin Kelly, founding editor of "Wired" magazine and a lifelong observer of technology in motion, returns to Motley Fool co-founder David Gardner's "Rule Breaker Investing" for a conversation about ...

MAGA’s War on Empathy

This crisis in Minneapolis reveals a deep moral rot at the heart of Trump’s movement.
As climate change and nature loss accelerate, the insurance protection gap is widening, putting households and communities at ...
Mathematics, like many other scientific endeavors, is increasingly using artificial intelligence. Of course, math is the ...
A Mathematician with early access to XAI Grok 4.20, found a new Bellman function for one of the problems he had been working on with my student N. Alpay. Not an Erdős problem, but original research.