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A critical look at Roger Clemens, Barry Bonds, the Mitchell Report, and the adulteration of American sports.
Issues surrounding death and dying have reentered the Supreme Court--and our personal lives.
We are well on our way to gaining greater biotechnical power to reengineer the human body and mind, all in the service of "superior performance." What kind of society might we become?
Frederick M. Hess, AEI director of education policy studies and Education Week blogger, released today his second annual "Edu-Scholar Public Presence Rankings." Traditional measures of research productivity, which focus on academic publication, are useful in their own right, but do not offer as much insight into how education scholars influence thinking and the national discourse.
Today, RHSU unveils the 2012 Edu-Scholar Public Presence rankings. The metrics, as explained yesterday, are designed to recognize those university-based academics who are contributing most substantially to public debates about schools and schooling.
Stuart A. Cohen's work stands the test of time and provides a handy reference for what remains an understudied period.
At this event, panelists discussed the emergence of geoengineering as a policy option and the congressional hearings being held on the subject.
Athletic steroid use sends the wrong message: while we should be valuing ourselves, we are instead valuing performance.




