A graduate of the Kennedy School of Government carries an inflatable globe during commencement exercises in Harvard Yard last May. They think they've got the whole world in their hands. (Josh Reynolds ...
Drivers hitting the roads this weekend could see upwards of $5 per gallon at the pump in some parts of the country as effects of the war in Iran continue to reverberate across the U.S. The national ...
As of 2026 Opening Day, the average player salary in Major League Baseball rose 3.4% from last year's season opener, per the Associated Press. The average is now $5.34 million, though there's a wide ...
Randy Shilling went to public high school in Corpus Christi, Texas. He graduated from Texas A&M University with a petroleum engineering degree. For the first decade of his career, he lived in an ...
The typical retiree on Social Security gets about $2,076 per month. There are steps you can take to boost your monthly benefits. Even with doing that, it's best to have some income outside of Social ...
Eighth graders can be successful in Algebra 1, new research suggests—they just might need some extra support. The findings come from a study of San Francisco schools, which has had a turbulent history ...
U.S. gas prices jumped past an average of $4 a gallon for the first time since 2022 as fuel prices continue to soar worldwide amid the Iran war. According to motor club AAA, the national average for a ...
M indy Bernhardt teaches criminal justice to undergraduates at Kennesaw State University. In recent years she has found herself grading more easily and expecting less from her students. The reason?
The 2026 March Madness championship tiebreaker hinges on predicting the combined final score, not individual team totals. Historic averages show men's games typically end around 141 total points, ...
Harvard University’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences will vote next month on whether to cap the number of A grades that instructors can assign in each course, effectively cutting in half the percentage ...
The academic effects of the pandemic weren’t just limited to school-age children. Kids who were babies and toddlers in the early years of COVID, currently in 1st and 2nd grades, are now struggling too ...