Subverting Climate Science in the Classroom
Oil and gas representatives influence the standards for courses and textbooks, from kindergarten to 12th grade
Katie Worth is a freelance writer in Boston. She is author of Miseducation: How Climate Change Is Taught in America (Columbia Global Reports, 2021). Credit: Nick Higgins
Oil and gas representatives influence the standards for courses and textbooks, from kindergarten to 12th grade
Old grudges between three teams of astronomers have threatened the survival of ground-based astronomy's boldest, biggest projects
Construction has begun on the Thirty Meter Telescope, despite continuing opposition by cultural and environmental activists
Mustardlike plants could be the first Earthlings to call Mars home if NASA decides to let them hitch a ride on the next rover
The first bird being considered for endangered species protections due to climate change migrates 30,000 kilometers a year
Importing the incisor-toothed hydrologists from Canada to the southernmost tip of South America seemed like a good idea in 1946, but it wasn’t
Science couples who overcame the two-body problem collaborate in the lab and the home
The Planetary Lake Lander is testing autonomous exploration technologies for a future mission to Saturn’s most intriguing moon
Remember that $800 billion Uncle Sam spent during the Great Recession? Here are some of the consequences
Editor’s note: Researchers exploring Mars via rover and satellite have to adapt to the longer day on the Red Planet. Katie Worth, whose Can Earthlings Adapt to the Longer Day on Mars?
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