Krupp helps students build soft skills
As assistant director of career development at the WashU Center for Career Engagement, Jennifer Krupp helps business students navigate the transition from graduate school to careers. Learn more in Human Resources’ staff spotlight.
Don’t let this vicious killer of children back into our lives
Control of invasive Hib and the other vaccine-preventable diseases is a remarkable achievement of modern medicine. Today, thousands of children who potentially would have contracted invasive Hib are alive and well because they were protected from the infection by vaccination. Let’s not give up this great accomplishment. Let’s not turn our backs on life-saving vaccines, writes Gregory Storch.
The Supreme Court Rewards Alabama’s Defiance
Earlier tonight, in yet another 6-3 shadow docket order, the Supreme Court stayed a three-judge district court’s injunction, thereby allowing Alabama to use a congressional map that was found to be intentionally discriminatory and in direct defiance of the Supreme Court’s 2023 decision in Allen v. Milligan, writes Travis Crum.
Maps are powerful political tools shaping a nation’s past, present and future – counter maps allow everyday people to reclaim the narrative
When maps and counter maps uncover and layer the otherwise unseen relationships that shape a place, they assert new forms of collective memory, offering more meaningful versions of public authority, writes Patty Heyda.
War and Famine
The prevalence of wasting among children in Gaza tracks with Israeli blockades on aid, but war may lead to famine even without such policies, writes Mark Manary, MD. How should starvation be prevented and treated in wartime?
Students explain device for visually impaired
A team of WashU McKelvey Engineering students explains in this Q&A how and why they designed the Locus Suit, a device to help people with visual impairments navigate the world more independently.
The False Promise of “Kin-First” Foster Care
Kinship care is the right choice for many children, but it should not be a benchmark of success. Children’s well-being is the standard that matters, writes Sarah Font.
The Ebola outbreak will lead to devastating violence against women and girls
We are about to run an old experiment again, with a worse strain, fewer resources, and a smaller global safety net. We know what the result will be. But this time, if we fail women and girls, we’ll have done so by deliberately turning a blind eye, write Lindsay Stark and Ilana Seff.
Law Schools Must Move Faster on Teaching AI in Legal Practice
AI is already changing legal work in unprecedented ways, and that no one can responsibly say with confidence where that change ends, writes Oliver Roberts.
Science Trains the Mind. It Must Also Train the Person
Technical excellence does not automatically lead to professionalism. Trainees must learn human skills like communication and accountability to achieve scientific success, writes Hong Chen.
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