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The New York Times inEducation

This section has been designed as a resource to connect Times journalism with key areas of study for students and faculty through our Education Subscription Program. If you are affiliated with a U.S. college or university, visit accessnyt.com to learn if your institution provides campus-wide access. All others should inquire with their library. If you are a faculty member, librarian, or administrator interested in bringing The New York Times to your school, visit the Group Subscriptions Page.

This section has been designed as a resource to connect Times journalism with key areas of study for students and faculty through our Education Subscription Program. If you are affiliated with a U.S. college or university, visit accessnyt.com to learn if your institution provides campus-wide access. All others should inquire with their library. If you are a faculty member, librarian, or administrator interested in bringing The New York Times to your school, visit the Group Subscriptions Page.

Highlights

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inEducation: American Government

More in inEducation: American Government ›
  1. 4 Takeaways From the Supreme Court Hearing on Trump’s Immunity Claim

    Several justices signaled interest in some protections for official acts, which could impede a swift trial in the federal election subversion case.

     By Charlie Savage and

    Credit
  2. Arizona House Votes to Repeal 1864 Abortion Law

    The almost-complete ban on abortions in the state could go into effect as soon as June 8 if the State Legislature does not repeal it, the state’s attorney general said.

     By Jack HealyElizabeth Dias and

    The Arizona House of Representatives was in session on Wednesday in Phoenix, Ariz.
    CreditAsh Ponders for The New York Times
  3. Arizona Charges Giuliani and Other Trump Allies in Election Interference Case

    Those charged included Boris Epshteyn, a top legal strategist for Donald Trump, and fake electors who acted on Mr. Trump’s behalf in Arizona after the 2020 election.

     By Danny Hakim and

    Rudolph W. Giuliani, Mark Meadows and several others were indicted in an election interference case in Arizona.
    CreditSophie Park for The New York Times
  4. 5 Takeaways From the Supreme Court Arguments on Idaho’s Abortion Ban

    The court’s ruling could extend to at least half a dozen other states that have similarly restrictive bans, and the implications of the case could stretch beyond abortion.

     By

    Idaho’s attorney general, Raúl Labrador, speaking outside the Supreme Court on Wednesday.
    CreditHaiyun Jiang for The New York Times

inEducation: Biology

More in inEducation: Biology ›
  1. Generative A.I. Arrives in the Gene Editing World of CRISPR

    Much as ChatGPT generates poetry, a new A.I. system devises blueprints for microscopic mechanisms that can edit your DNA.

     By

    Structure of the first AI-generated and open-sourced gene editor, OpenCRISPR-1.
    Credit
  2. Cicadas Are Emerging Now. How Do They Know When to Come Out?

    Scientists are making computer models to better understand how the mysterious insects emerge collectively after more than a decade underground.

     By

    The United States is home to a dozen cicada broods that have a 17-year cycle, and three with a cycle that takes 13 years.
    CreditWill Dunham/Reuters
  3. In Coral Fossils, Searching for the First Glow of Bioluminescence

    A new study resets the timing for the emergence of bioluminescence back to millions of years earlier than previously thought.

     By

    Iridogorgia, a genus of deep-sea bioluminescent coral.
    CreditNOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research, Deepwater Wonders of Wake
  4. Should We Change Species to Save Them?

    When traditional conservation fails, science is using “assisted evolution” to give vulnerable wildlife a chance.

     By Emily Anthes and

    CreditPhoto illustration by Lauren Peters-Collaer

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inEducation: Computer Science

More in inEducation: Computer Science ›
  1. Generative A.I. Arrives in the Gene Editing World of CRISPR

    Much as ChatGPT generates poetry, a new A.I. system devises blueprints for microscopic mechanisms that can edit your DNA.

     By

    Structure of the first AI-generated and open-sourced gene editor, OpenCRISPR-1.
    Credit
  2. ‘To the Future’: Saudi Arabia Spends Big to Become an A.I. Superpower

    The oil-rich kingdom is plowing money into glitzy events, computing power and artificial intelligence research, putting it in the middle of an escalating U.S.-China struggle for technological influence.

     By Adam Satariano and

    More than 200,000 people converged on the Leap tech conference in the desert outside Riyadh in March.
    CreditIman Al-Dabbagh for The New York Times
  3. Microsoft Makes a New Push Into Smaller A.I. Systems

    The company that has invested billions in generative A.I. pioneers like OpenAI says giant systems aren’t necessarily what everyone needs.

     By Karen Weise and

    The smallest Microsoft Phi-3 model can fit on a smartphone, and it runs on the kinds of chips that power regular computers.
    CreditMichael M. Santiago/Getty Images
  4. Meta’s A.I. Assistant Is Fun to Use, but It Can’t Be Trusted

    Despite Mark Zuckerberg’s hope for the chatbot to be the smartest, it struggles with facts, numbers and web search.

     By

    CreditDerek Abella

inEducation: English

More in inEducation: English ›
  1. This Conversation Made Me a Sharper Editor

    The venerated editor Adam Moss walks through how to make good work great.

     By

    CreditHugo Yu
  2. 460 Years Ago, Shakespeare Was Born Here. Or Somewhere.

    Every year, millions flock to Stratford-upon-Avon, England, to visit the house known as Shakespeare’s Birthplace. But was he really born there? A whole industry depends on it.

     By

    The building thought to be Shakespeare’s birthplace before it was bought and renovated in the late 1800s. One British magazine called it a “shabby sausage-shop” at the time of the sale.
    CreditChronicle/Alamy
  3. Quick! Someone Get This Book a Doctor.

    Inside the book conservation lab at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

     By Molly Young and

    CreditNicholas Calcott for The New York Times
  4. 4 Books to Make You Fall in Love With Poetry

    Gregory Cowles, the poetry editor of The New York Times Book Review, recommends four books that are perfect for National Poetry Month.

     By Gregory CowlesKaren Hanley and

    Credit

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inEducation: Environmental Science

More in inEducation: Environmental Science ›
  1. Five Things to Know About Biden’s New Power Plant Rules

    The administration issued a major climate regulation aimed at virtually eliminating carbon emissions from coal, the dirtiest of the fossil fuels and a driver of global warming.

     By Coral Davenport and

    Republican-led states and the coal industry are all but certain to challenge the rules in court.
    CreditChris Carlson/Associated Press
  2. Yellowstone’s Wolves: A Debate Over Their Role in the Park’s Ecosystem

    New research questions the long-held theory that reintroduction of such a predator caused a trophic cascade, spawning renewal of vegetation and spurring biodiversity.

     By

    Some say that the wolves’ contribution to ecological improvements in Yellowstone were only one piece of a larger picture and that grizzly bears, beavers and even humans played a role.
    CreditDiane Renkin/National Park Service
  3. E.P.A. Severely Limits Pollution From Coal-Burning Power Plants

    New regulations could spell the end for plants that burn coal, the fossil fuel that powered the country for more than a century.

     By Lisa Friedman and

    CreditKim Raff for The New York Times
  4. Carbon Dioxide Levels Have Passed a New Milestone

    There’s 50 percent more carbon dioxide in the air than before the Industrial Revolution.

     By

    CreditThe New York Times

inEducation: Finance and Economics

More in inEducation: Finance and Economics ›
  1. 3 Facts That Help Explain a Confusing Economic Moment

    The path to a “soft landing” doesn’t seem as smooth as it did four months ago. But the expectations of a year ago have been surpassed.

     By

    CreditThe New York Times
  2. ‘Pay Later’ Lenders Have an Issue With Credit Bureaus

    Firms like Experian and TransUnion say it is time for “buy now, pay later” loans to appear on consumer credit reports. The lenders aren’t ready to sign on.

     By Jordyn Holman and

    CreditMonica Garwood
  3. Could the Union Victory at VW Set Off a Wave?

    Some experts say the outcome at a plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., may be organized labor’s most significant advance in decades. But the road could get rockier.

     By

    The president of the United Automobile Workers union, Shawn Fain, visited the Volkswagen plant in Chattanooga, Tenn., last year.
    CreditOlivia Ross/Chattanooga Times Free Press, via Associated Press
  4. Why Better Times (and Big Raises) Haven’t Cured the Inflation Hangover

    Frustrated by higher prices, many Pennsylvanians with fresh pay raises and solid finances report a sense of insecurity lingering from the pandemic.

     By

    Levity Brewing occupies a former supply store with floor-to-ceiling windows in downtown Altoona, part of a district that has been revitalizing since 2021.
    CreditRoss Mantle for The New York Times

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inEducation: The Arts

More in inEducation: The Arts ›
  1. Popcast (Deluxe): Taylor Swift’s ‘Tortured’ Era

    A discussion about the singer’s new album, “The Tortured Poets Department,” her “imperial era,” rumored relationships and production choices.

     

    CreditCaroline Brehman/EPA, via Shutterstock
  2. Music Is More Than Just Sound

    SFMOMA explores the galaxy of visual and technological design that has long revolved around the music we love.

     By

    A Yuri Suzuki installation at SFMOMA’s “Art of Noise” exhibition. The work, titled “Arborhythm,” collects, remixes and broadcasts sounds from the streets of San Francisco from the balcony of the museum.
    CreditJim Wilson/The New York Times
  3. Rotting Fruit, an Animatronic Mouse and Other Highlights of the Venice Biennale

    A tour of the international exhibition, which opened last week and runs through November.

     By

    Credit
  4. How to Begin a Creative Life

    We spoke to 150 artists, some planning retrospectives and others making their debut, to ask about the process of starting something.

     

    CreditShikeith

inEducation: Health Sciences

More in inEducation: Health Sciences ›
  1. F.D.A. Approves Antibiotic for Increasingly Hard-to-Treat Urinary Tract Infections

    Pivmecillinam, which has been used in Europe for decades, will become available next year to women 18 and older.

     By

    A colored scanning electron micrograph showing bacteria in a urine sample.
    CreditSteve Gschmeissner/Science Source
  2. New Nutrition Guidelines Put Less Sugar and Salt on the Menu for School Meals

    The Agriculture Department finalized a new rule to bring the meals more in line with federal dietary standards.

     By

    Added sugars provide about 17 percent of calories in school breakfast and 11 percent in school lunches on average, according to a May 2022 government report.
    CreditAudra Melton for The New York Times
  3. Skepticism Is Healthy, but in Medicine, It Can Be Dangerous

    Skepticism and distrust of health practitioners is on the rise. How are doctors supposed to restore patient trust?

     By

    CreditPhillip Toledano/Trunk Archive
  4. Heat-Related E.R. Visits Rose in 2023, C.D.C. Study Finds

    As record heat enveloped the nation, the rate of emergency room visits increased compared with the previous five years, a sign of the major health risks of high temperatures.

     By

    The sun setting in July over Phoenix. Last year was the warmest on Earth in a century and a half, with the hottest summer on record.
    CreditMatt York/Associated Press

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inEducation: History

More in inEducation: History ›
  1. America Was Once the Country Begging Richer Allies for Help

    The logic of foreign entanglement was the same then as now.

     By

    CreditNicholas Stevenson
  2. Women Who Made Art in Japanese Internment Camps Are Getting Their Due

    A traveling exhibit will focus on the work of three Japanese American women artists, Hisako Hibi, Miki Hayakawa and Miné Okubo.

     By

    The artist Miné Okubo sketching at the Tanforan internment center in 1942, where she and thousands of other Japanese Americans were incarcerated during World War II.
    CreditJapanese American National Museum
  3. Where Kamala Harris Lives, a Little-Known History of Enslavement

    The vice president’s official residence is in a quiet Washington enclave once home to 34 enslaved people. Ms. Harris has sought to reconnect the property to its Black heritage.

     By

    Vice President Kamala Harris lives in the white turreted Queen Anne-style three-story building that replaced the home of a slave owner on the same property.
    CreditBrendan Smialowski/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
  4. The Eclipse That Ended a War and Shook the Gods Forever

    Thales, a Greek philosopher 2,600 years ago, is celebrated for predicting a famous solar eclipse and founding what came to be known as science.

     By

    CreditJohn P. Dessereau
  5. Flashback: Your Weekly History Quiz, April 20, 2024

    Can you sort 8 historical events?

     

    Credit

inEducation: Leadership

More in inEducation: Leadership ›
  1. The Quiet Magic of Middle Managers

    Amid a wider national atmosphere of division, distrust, bitterness and exhaustion, middle managers are the frontline workers trying to resolve tensions and keep communities working.

     By

    CreditPete Gamlen
  2. Julia Louis-Dreyfus Thinks Youth Is Overrated

    The actor wants you to start listening to older women — and not just because they’re guests on her podcast.

     By

    CreditDiego Mallo
  3. It’s Lonely at the Top

    When making difficult decisions, you won’t help matters by over-explaining that you did what was best for everyone.

     By

    CreditPhoto Illustration by Margeaux Walter for The New York Times
  4. Elon Musk’s Mindset: ‘It’s a Weakness to Want to Be Liked’

    In an interview, the tech billionaire slams advertisers for pulling back from X and discusses his emotional state.

     By Andrew Ross SorkinEvan RobertsElaine ChenDan Powell and

    Credit

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inEducation: Psychology

More in inEducation: Psychology ›
  1. 7 Books on Navigating Grief

    Psychologists, counselors and other experts share the titles they recommend most.

     By

    CreditMonica Garwood
  2. Why Your Big Sister Resents You

    “Eldest daughter syndrome” assumes that birth order shapes who we are and how we interact. Does it?

     By

    CreditBianca Bagnarelli
  3. Sexism, Hate, Mental Illness: Why Are Men Randomly Punching Women?

    Conversation about the attacks on the streets of New York have centered on mental illness, but the offenses seem to have their roots in hatred of women.

     By

    Halley McGookin, in a still from her March TikTok video after she had been punched in the head on a Manhattan street.
    CreditHalley McGookin
  4. Perfectionism Is a Trap. Here’s How to Escape.

    Perfectionism among young people has skyrocketed, but experts say there are ways to quiet your inner critic.

     By

    CreditLinda Merad

inEducation: Sociology

More in inEducation: Sociology ›
  1. How a Virtual Assistant Taught Me to Appreciate Busywork

    A new category of apps promises to relieve parents of drudgery, with an assist from A.I. But a family’s grunt work is more human, and valuable, than it seems.

     By

    CreditCari Vander Yacht
  2. You’ve Been Wronged. That Doesn’t Make You Right.

    Never had our culture made the claiming of complaint such an animating force.

     By

    CreditIllustration by Sam Whitney/The New York Times
  3. This Lava Tube in Saudi Arabia Has Been a Human Refuge for 7,000 Years

    Ancient humans left behind numerous archaeological traces in the cavern, and scientists say there may be thousands more like it on the Arabian Peninsula to study.

     By

    The Umm Jirsan lava tube system of Saudi Arabia has provided shelter for humans herding livestock for at least 7,000 years.
    CreditPalaeodeserts Project
  4. Sexism, Hate, Mental Illness: Why Are Men Randomly Punching Women?

    Conversation about the attacks on the streets of New York have centered on mental illness, but the offenses seem to have their roots in hatred of women.

     By

    Halley McGookin, in a still from her March TikTok video after she had been punched in the head on a Manhattan street.
    CreditHalley McGookin

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