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Schools are harnessing artificial intelligence to revolutionize courses in hospitality management

  • Written by Betsy Pudliner, Associate Professor of Hospitality and Technology Innovation, University of Wisconsin-Stout
imageGenerative AI helps create dynamic simulations that provide students with hands-on, project-based learning experiences.Matt Bird/Getty Images

Uncommon Courses is an occasional series from The Conversation U.S. highlighting unconventional approaches to teaching.

Title of course:

Hospitality Employee Relations

What prompted the idea for the course?

The...

Read more: Schools are harnessing artificial intelligence to revolutionize courses in hospitality management

Black Americans are more likely than other racial groups to express their faith in the workplace

  • Written by Elaine Howard Ecklund, Professor of Sociology, Rice University
imageMany Black Americans want to bring their faith to work but face discrimination.Keeproll/E+ via Getty Images

Nearly 40% of Black workers feel comfortable talking about their faith with people at work, the highest of any U.S. racial group, our two recent studies found. But they also risk facing religious discrimination.

For the past 15 years, we have...

Read more: Black Americans are more likely than other racial groups to express their faith in the workplace

China’s new underwater tool cuts deep, exposing vulnerability of vital network of subsea cables

  • Written by John Calabrese, Assistant Professor, School of Public Affairs and Non-Resident Senior Fellow, Middle East Institute, American University
imageLaying an undersea fiber-optic cable at Arrietara beach near the Spanish village of Sopelana.Ander Gillenea/AFP via Getty Images

Chinese researchers have unveiled a new deep-sea tool capable of cutting through the world’s most secure subsea cables − and it has many in the West feeling a little jittery.

The development, first revealed in...

Read more: China’s new underwater tool cuts deep, exposing vulnerability of vital network of subsea cables

Will Africa’s young voters continue to punish incumbents at the ballot box in 2025? We are about to find out

  • Written by Richard Aidoo, Professor of Political Science, Coastal Carolina University
imageSupporters of opposition candidate and former President John Dramani Mahama celebrate his victory in Accra, Ghana, on Dec. 8, 2024. AP Photo/Jerome Delay

Voters in Gabon head to the ballot box on April 12, 2025, in a vote that marks the first election in the Central African nation since a 2023 coup ended the 56-year rule of the Bongo family.

It is...

Read more: Will Africa’s young voters continue to punish incumbents at the ballot box in 2025? We are about...

Universities in Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union thought giving in to government demands would save their independence

  • Written by Iveta Silova, Professor of Comparative and International Education, Arizona State University
imageColumbia University has been in the crosshairs of the Trump administration. Rudi Von Briel/Photodisc via Getty Images

Many American universities, widely seen globally as beacons of academic integrity and free speech, are giving in to demands from the Trump administration, which has been targeting academia since it took office.

In one of his first...

Read more: Universities in Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union thought giving in to government demands would...

Supreme Court’s decision on deportations gave both the Trump administration and ACLU reasons to claim a victory − but noncitizens clearly lost

  • Written by Rebecca Hamlin, Professor of Legal Studies and Political Science, UMass Amherst
imageA prison officer guards a gate at the Terrorism Confinement Center in El Salvador, where hundreds of migrants from the United States were deported by the Trump administration. Alex Pena/Anadolu via Getty Images

President Donald Trump has claimed victory at the Supreme Court in his campaign to deport Venezuelan migrants accused by the government of...

Read more: Supreme Court’s decision on deportations gave both the Trump administration and ACLU reasons to...

Why you should think twice before using shorthand like ‘thx’ and ‘k’ in your texts

  • Written by David Fang, PhD Student in Marketing, Stanford University
imageWhen a texter chops words down, recipients sometimes sense a lack of effort.35mmf2/iStock via Getty Images Plus

My brother’s text messages can read like fragments of an ancient code: “hru,” “wyd,” “plz” – truncated, cryptic and never quite satisfying to receive. I’ll often find myself...

Read more: Why you should think twice before using shorthand like ‘thx’ and ‘k’ in your texts

Colorado’s early childhood education workers face burnout and health disparities, but a wellness campaign could help

  • Written by Jini Puma, Clinical Associate Professor of Public Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
imageEarly childhood education workers face high stress and burnout.FatCamera/GettyImages

A lot of research has been done on the outcomes of young children who receive care in early education programs across the country. High-quality early childhood education programs positively shape young children’s development. Far less research has focused on...

Read more: Colorado’s early childhood education workers face burnout and health disparities, but a wellness...

Americans die earlier at all wealth levels, even if wealth buys more years of life in the US than in Europe

  • Written by Sara Machado, Research Scientist in Health Economics, Brown University
imageWealth can buy health – but only to a point. marekuliasz/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Americans at all wealth levels are more likely to die sooner than their European counterparts, with even the richest U.S. citizens living shorter lives than northern and western Europeans. That is the key finding of our new study, published in the New...

Read more: Americans die earlier at all wealth levels, even if wealth buys more years of life in the US than...

What would happen if Section 230 went away? A legal expert explains the consequences of repealing ‘the law that built the internet’

  • Written by Daryl Lim, Professor of Law and Associate Dean for Research and Innovation, Penn State
imageSens. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., and Dick Durbin, D-Ill., are vocal critics of Section 230.AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, passed in 1996 as part of the Telecommunications Act, has become a political lightning rod in recent years. The law shields online platforms from liability for user-generated content...

Read more: What would happen if Section 230 went away? A legal expert explains the consequences of repealing...

More Articles ...

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  2. Two key ingredients cause extreme storms with destructive flooding – why these downpours are happening more often
  3. Why some storms brew up to extreme dimensions in the middle of America – and why it’s happening more often
  4. Cities that want to attract business might want to focus less on financial incentives and more on making people feel safe
  5. The founder kings of Silicon Valley: Dual-class stock gives US social media company controllers nearly as much power as ByteDance has over TikTok
  6. Social media before bedtime wreaks havoc on our sleep − a sleep researcher explains why screens alone aren’t the main culprit
  7. How racism fueled the Eaton Fire’s destruction in Altadena − a scholar explains why discrimination can raise fire risk for Black Californians
  8. Providing farmworkers with health insurance is worth it for their employers − new research
  9. Peru’s ancient irrigation systems succeeded in turning deserts into farms because of the culture − without it, the systems failed
  10. The ‘courage to be’ in uncertain times − how one 20th-century philosopher defined bravery
  11. AI isn’t what we should be worried about – it’s the humans controlling it
  12. What is reinforcement learning? An AI researcher explains a key method of teaching machines – and how it relates to training your dog
  13. American liberators of Nazi camps got ‘a lifelong vaccine against extremism’ − their wartime experiences are a warning for today
  14. EPA must use the best available science − by law − but what does that mean?
  15. The trade deficit isn’t an emergency – it’s a sign of America’s strength
  16. Alcohol causes cancer, and less than 1 drink can increase your risk − a cancer biologist explains how
  17. Animal tranquilizers found in illegal opioids may suppress the lifesaving medication naloxone − and cause more overdose deaths
  18. Housing instability complicates end-of-life care for aging unhoused populations
  19. How the small autonomous region of Puntland found success in battling Islamic State in Somalia
  20. What ancient animal fables from India teach about political wisdom
  21. Hip-hop can document life in America more reliably than history books
  22. The hidden power of marathon Senate speeches: What history tells us about Cory Booker’s 25-hour oration
  23. More than just chips: Chinese threats and Trump tariffs could disrupt lots of ‘made in Taiwan’ imports − disappointing US builders, cyclists and golfers alike
  24. Being alone has its benefits − a psychologist flips the script on the ‘loneliness epidemic’
  25. Abolition wasn’t fueled by just moral or economic concerns – the booming whaling industry also helped sink slavery
  26. Florida is home to about 341,000 immigrants from Venezuela and Haiti who may soon lose residency, work permits
  27. The Trump administration says Tren de Aragua is a terrorist group – but it’s really a transnational criminal organization. Here’s why the label matters.
  28. The problem with Trump’s takeover of the Kennedy Center isn’t the possibility of ‘Cats’
  29. Hormone therapy may cut cardiovascular risk in younger menopausal women
  30. Hard work feels worth it, but only after it’s done – new research on how people value effort
  31. Insects are everywhere in farming and research − but insect welfare is just catching up
  32. Myanmar military’s ‘ceasefire’ follows a pattern of ruling generals exploiting disasters to shore up control
  33. How a lone judge can block a Trump order nationwide – and why, from DACA to DOGE, this judicial check on presidents’ power is shaping how the government works
  34. Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’ tariffs are the highest in decades − an economist explains how that could hurt the US
  35. Why tattoos are such an unreliable marker of gang membership
  36. Lessons from El Salvador for US university leaders facing attacks from Trump
  37. Lowering the cost of insurance in Colorado – a new analysis of the Peak Health Alliance
  38. Medicare Advantage is covering more and more Americans − some because they don’t get to choose
  39. Susan Monarez, Trump’s nominee for CDC director, faces an unprecedented and tumultuous era at the agency
  40. Vitamin D builds your bones and keeps your gut sealed, among many other essential functions − but many children are deficient
  41. From business exports to veteran care − here’s what some of the 35,000 federal workers in the Philadelphia region do
  42. Supreme Court considers whether states may prevent people covered by Medicaid from choosing Planned Parenthood as their health care provider
  43. Chinese barges and Taiwan Strait drills are about global power projection − not just a potential invasion
  44. Feeling FOMO for something that’s not even fun? It’s not the event you’re missing, it’s the bonding
  45. 23andMe is potentially selling more than just genetic data – the personal survey info it collected is just as much a privacy problem
  46. Research shows that a majority of Christian religious leaders accept the reality of climate change but have never mentioned it to their congregations
  47. The never-ending sentence: How parole and probation fuel mass incarceration
  48. In Israel, calls for genocide have migrated from the margins to the mainstream
  49. With its executive order targeting the Smithsonian, the Trump administration opens up a new front in the history wars
  50. Christian Zionism hasn’t always been a conservative evangelical creed – churches’ views of Israel have evolved over decades