Research today is about partnerships and networks to share data and ideas, and to answer the big questions that confront us.
Academics, industry and government have joined together, setting the stage for Canada to become a research and development powerhouse in AI.
It would be a shame if the lesson learned is simply to remove the controversial bits from your course.
“Animals have made tremendous contributions to our understanding of human biology, but they are not us.”
When asked by students for advice on email etiquette, I tell them to stick to the three golden C’s: be clear, concise, and courteous.
University leaders concerned about the employability of graduates should sustain academic and curricular diversity, including the liberal arts.
The new station in Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, will study Arctic issues including climate change.
“Extremism is now startlingly pervasive, politically poisonous, and requires constant repudiation.”
A university principal reflects on his efforts to stay active as a professor.
The new blacklist is being described as a more transparent replacement to Beall’s list.
Protests like the March for Science can be cathartic, but Canada’s science community and government should both ditch spin and open the lines of communication.