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The Dirt That Refused to Die

The Dirt That Refused To Die Introduction For 15 years, Sébastien Fontaine has been trying to kill dirt. The biochemist, who runs a lab at the French National Institute for Agriculture, Food, and Environment, wanted to know how much carbon is released by soil — just dirt alone, completely devoid of life. His team sealed dirt into jars and blasted them with sterilizing gamma radiation.

Hacker News 8d ago

New policy redrawing curricula: French, German find themselves out of class

New Delhi: For years, foreign languages such as French, German, Spanish and Japanese have occupied a distinct place in Delhi schools, offering students a window to global education and careers. But as schools begin implementing the three-language formula under National Education Policy (NEP), many of these programmes are being scaled back, leaving teachers worried about their future and parents questioning the sudden shift in language choices. For many, the concern goes beyond a change in...

Times of India 2d ago

Malaysia’s new university rules rekindle multilingualism debate

A revision to Malaysia’s public university admissions rules has reopened one of the multicultural country’s most sensitive political debates: how far its national education system should accommodate Chinese-language schooling. Malaysia’s government on May 15 said students from Chinese independent secondary schools could apply to public universities through specified pathways using the Unified Examination Certificate (UEC), the school-leaving qualification used by those institutions.

South China Morning Post 5d ago

After losing my daughter, I learned where the immigration crisis really begins

My youngest daughter Katie was killed when an intoxicated illegal immigrant slammed into the back of the vehicle she was riding in at nearly 80 miles an hour while it sat idle at a stoplight. Ever since, I have been trying to understand how reckless public policies allowed something so horrific, and so preventable, to happen. Katie’s death forced me to look beyond slogans and political talking points and ask harder questions about what America’s immigration system has become, who benefits...

Fox News 7d ago

Fluorescent nanosensor detects key gut biomarker in minutes for faster testing

Fluorescent nanosensor detects key gut biomarker in minutes for faster testing Sadie Harley Scientific Editor Robert Egan Associate Editor A research collaboration has developed a novel fluorescent nanosensor capable of rapidly detecting indole-3-propionic acid (IPA), an emerging biomarker linked to gut health and disease. The breakthrough is described in the team's paper, "Fluorescent Nanosensor for Indole-3-Propionic Acid Detection in Gut Health Monitoring," published in the journal...

Phys.org 7d ago

Generation AI: Schools in Asia are embracing artificial intelligence

The schools in Asia embracing artificial intelligence in classrooms Sun 31 May 2026 at 5:12am Anaiya Singhvi loves school, but she often finds chemistry tough going. "It's kind of hard to visualise in real life since it's about molecules and atoms," the Singapore-based secondary school student said. "I've been using AI to help me with that."

ABC Australia 10d ago

Supporting complex care with confidence and compassion

Supporting complex care with confidence and compassion After years of working with children and youths with intellectual disabilities, senior psychologist Melody Tan Hui Shan sought deeper clinical training through NIE’s Master of Arts (Applied Psychology) to deliver more tailored care. For close to 15 years, Ms Melody Tan Hui Shan worked with young people aged seven to 18 years old at MINDS Fernvale Gardens School, providing interventions, caregiver guidance and school-based services for...

Channel News Asia 6h ago

What Beijing’s shrinking youth population reveals about its changing appeal

What Beijing’s shrinking youth population reveals about its changing appeal Beijing’s resident adult population aged 20 to 29 has nearly halved over the past decade. CNA explores how young Chinese are recalculating the costs and benefits of life in the capital, even as it remains a magnet for talent. BEIJING: Zhao Haozhe, 20, has never lived anywhere but Beijing.

Channel News Asia 1d ago