Peter Thiel argues that advances in artificial intelligence could shift societal power structures by reducing the dominance of math-based credentials, potentially favoring "word skills" instead, while ...
Vanderbilt University has launched an investigation into a math lecturer after he presented an anti-Israel calculus word problem to his class.
The Register on MSN
AI models still suck at math
Just less than before, according to the ORCA test exclusive Current-day LLMs are prediction engines and, as such, they can ...
A rural Indiana school district leader started a network of microschools to help keep students in his schools. The model ...
In a time of great financial instability for Chicago, legalizing unregulated video gambling terminals will only worsen our problems.
According to a study published in the National Library of Medicine, children who learned not to add strain to already ...
Research on introversion and early independence published in PMC via the National Library of Medicine found that people who developed a strong internal orientation in childhood tend to function ...
The Hechinger Report on MSN
Are microschools a solution to falling public school enrollment? One district thinks so
GREENFIELD, Ind. — Seventh grader Taitym Lynch plans most of her school day herself, mapping out a schedule each morning on her school laptop. She typically starts with math when her brain is sharpest ...
The CMO role is evolving, blending data science with AI's unpredictability. Niva Bupa's Nimish Agrawal highlights the shift from SEO to AEO, emphasizing technology as a human empathy enabler. Leaders ...
We have all been hearing those whispers about robots taking over our desks for years, right? But it always felt like a problem for "future us." Well, it looks like "future us" just showed up to work.
From crisis-site problem solving to trauma-informed housing, Renard's team treats speed as a discipline, not a shortcut.
VnExpress International on MSN
After 400 practice tests in 18 months, Vietnamese student nails perfect 1600 on SAT
Nguyen Tuan Anh, a 16-year-old junior in Hanoi, fell 30 points short of perfection on his first SAT. He spent the next three months dissecting what went wrong, then walked into his second attempt and ...
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