Angry evaluations are not that helpful in assessing what faculty members do well or where they need improvement. They carry bias and impede career development.
By: Michelle Falkoff
Government Agencies can better leverage the Internet of Things to improve services and save money, but few do. A few steps can enable them to follow through on IoT implementation.
By: Joshua New
National and private organizations have invested millions of dollars in science diversity programs designed to shift patterns of representation in STEM fields. The key to seeing student success is to promote a students' sense of belonging. By: Kimberly A. Griffin
The first woman to lead the body that awards the Nobel Prize in Literature was forced out on Thursday, a stunning casualty in a sexual abuse and harassment scandal that has threatened to sully one of the world’s most acclaimed cultural honors. By: Christina Anderson
Kaede Ota was the director of the Clinical Microbiology Lab at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia and an assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman School of Medicine until she had a baby. Her work environment became "vicious, discriminatory, retaliatory and hostile" as a result. By: Victor Fiorillo