Men tend to dominate the question-and-answer sessions at academic conferences, potentially wielding a significant influence over the future trajectory of scientific research. Recent research sheds ...
This week, I renewed my TSA PreCheck membership. Why? I’m not so sure. For some (admittedly privileged) portion of academics, flying for work is a typical (usually annual) event. I have flown ...
OXFORD, England--(BUSINESS WIRE)--In scientific research, academic communication is indispensable. With the help of new media platforms and online meeting software, conference organizers gradually ...
You have /3 articles left. Sign up for a free account or log in. We need more kids at our academic conferences. More babies. More toddlers. More school-agers. More ...
[This is a guest post by Stan Kurkovsky, a professor of computer science at CCSU. Stan and I are teaching a course abroad next year called Secrecy: Science & Fiction. (I totally can’t believe I’ve ...
Please provide your email address to receive an email when new articles are posted on . Women appeared less likely to ask questions during Q&A sessions at academic conferences than their male ...
To my disappointment, Robin Wilson’s article on children at academic conferences oversimplified a complicated professional situation by showing only examples of stereotypically obnoxious behavior on ...
SALISBURY — The Honors Program of Livingstone College engaged in two academic conferences Nov. 1-4. While a group of students traveled to Southern University at Baton Rouge for competition in the ...
Scholars around the world share their latest research findings with a decidedly low-tech ritual: printing a 48-inch by 36-inch poster densely packed with charts and graphs, and accompanied by blocks ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results