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College: What It Was, Is, and Should Be

College: What It Was, Is, and Should Be

Edward Gibbon’s The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire is often loosely cited to support even looser claims that America is declining. But Gibbon’s observation that in ancient Rome “a cloud of critics, compilers, of commentators, darkened the face of learning” does resonate with something that's gone wrong in American liberal-arts education. In his telling, Rome’s loss of its republican virtues had left its later writers and orators in “very unequal competition with those bold ancients” who had expressed “their genuine feelings in their native tongue” and, "living under a ... Read More

Duets and Diapers: Music Lessons Benefit Babies

When should you start your child on music lessons? New research suggests the answer is somewhere around age six. Six months, that is. In two recently published papers, psychologists Laurel Trainor and David Gerry of the McMaster Institute for Music and the Mind report music training can foster babies’ emotional development and communication skills. “The infant brain might be particularly plastic with respect to musical experience,” the researchers write in the journal Developmental Science. “When parents are actively involved and materials appropriate for infants are utilized, ... Read More

Are Evaluators Afraid To Criticize Minority Students?

White evaluators may go easier on minority students for fear of appearing racist, according to a new study. Psychologists at the University of British Columbia gave a group of white undergraduate students essays that were identified as being written by white or minority high school students. Though the essays were all of similar quality, the undergraduate evaluators gave fewer negative critiques and higher grades to minority students than to white students. To determine the cause of the differing critiques the evaluators were given a questionnaire where they were asked to rank the ... Read More

Researchers & Discoveries: Black Hole Hunter

Ghez

What’s her story? In January, Andrea Ghez became the first woman to win the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences’ Crafoord Prize, one of the highest honors in astronomy. How’d she do that? Proved that a supermassive black hole sits at the center of our galaxy. Ghez helped develop optical technologies that cut through the sight-muddying effects of Earth’s atmosphere, enabling her team to see the Milky Way’s center — 26,000 light years away — far more clearly than ever before. Which let them monitor thousands of previously invisible stars. Their orbital trajectories, Ghez showed, ... Read More

Second Language Translates Into Clearer Thinking

Would you like to think more rationally, especially where your finances are concerned? Did you learn a second language in school — say, Spanish? If so, University of Chicago researchers have a suggestion for you: Use Español. A research team led by psychologist Boaz Keysar reports using one’s second language reduces or eliminates certain biases that otherwise infiltrate our decision-making. Specifically, our aversion to potential loss — a bias that can lead us to pass up promising opportunities for potential gains — diminishes as we ponder options in a language learned later in ... Read More