- The New York Times has an interesting article about the latest international math/science testing. American kids actually fared pretty well, behind just a few other countries. More focused testing on individual states puts Massachusetts kids behind only Taiwan and Singapore.
- Encephalon is up at Living the Scientific Life
- Skills for Healthy Living blog reports that Pain intensity does not correlate with life satisfaction in people with long-term pain
- And, just in time for your office holiday party, BPS Research Digest reports on How to name-drop
- Inspired by a typo on CogDaily, CogLangLab muses on whether sloppy grammar=sloppy thinking
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Over at The Art of Science Learning, Peter Economy writes:
One of my great concerns for this country's future is the underperformance of our youth when it comes to achievement in math and science. In December 2010, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) released the…
[Another post from two years ago. Everybody is talking universal health care now. Two years ago, nada. Well, almost nada. Below is what we said then (and continue to say, now). But first this, to show the original post is still current:
Americans are living longer than ever, but not as long as…
In a bunch of different contexts, I keep reading about how poorly the U.S. is doing in science. And that's true at the national level--we do fare poorly in comparison to other countries. But it's worth remembering that the U.S. is a really large country, geographically and in terms of population…
I am Peter Economy, and I have for as long as I can remember been a fan and practitioner of both the arts (specifically, the musical arts) and science. Some years ago, I had the very good fortune to be invited by Harvey Seifter to help him write a book on New York's Orpheus Chamber Orchestra and…
But is there an empirically demonstrated relationship between the test scores of pre-teens and the kind of scientific and technological mojo required for economic competitiveness?