A group of Indigenous students helped put together a new course for Stelly’s Secondary with local First Nations input.
NPR's Scott Simon speaks with Laura Atkinson and Justin Hicks of Louisville Public Media about shape note singing and its influence across the American musical tradition.
Solicitor General Tushar Mehta emphasised that legislative drafting was a science and an art, stating that even a comma could change the interpretation of a law ...
With a new mathematical model, a team of biophysicists has revealed fresh insights into how biological tissues are shaped by the active motion of structural imperfections known as "topological defects ...
Math scores across the board have risen in the years after the pandemic, but a stubborn gap remains between poor schools and the state average.
ACHS announces Dean Lori Holdren’s appointment to the AMATYC Executive Board, strengthening leadership in mathematics ...
“Our goal was to build a clear mathematical bridge between abstract algebra and the experience of listening to music,” said study co-author Olga Ibragimova. “When we think of melodies as shapes we can ...
Why do some melodies feel instantly right, balanced, memorable and satisfying, even if you have never heard them before? New research from the University of Waterloo suggests that more than creativity ...
Provided content. One ball on a Plinko board is unpredictable. Drop a thousand and they form a near-perfect bell curve—one of math’s most powerful ideas for 150+ years.
Shana Engel, a teacher in Colorado Springs, talked about how her mother’s struggle to learn English shaped her approach and ...
More than 900 students at UC San Diego needed catch-up math classes in the fall of 2025 compared to 32 five years earlier.
Fragility, in an island state, is not a metaphor. It is geography.
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