Sunday, April 24, 2016

Care To Remember What You Write? Put Your Laptop Away (After Reading This)

Students remember better when they take notes longhand, according to new research. It's all about being forced to slow down and get selective about what you write.
Best of NPR
The Arctic Suicides

A cluster of suicides is tearing its way through Greenland's youngest generation

The suicide rate is so high in the country, it's not an exaggeration to say that everyone there knows someone who has killed himself. And teen boys are at the highest risk. What in the world is going on in the Arctic?

An NPR investigation

School Money

Why America's schools have a money problem

How can one school district spend $9,794 on each student, while another district, less than an hour away, spends $28,639? That answer still depends on local property taxes — and it can have a massive impact on a child's education. Together with our member stations, we dig into just how uneven the nation's playing field is.

Find out what your district spends

The Write Stuff

The pen is mightier than the laptop

And here's why: Students remember more when they take notes longhand rather than on a laptop, according to new research. When you're forced to slow down, you're forced to get selective — and attentive — about what you're writing.

Why the old-fashioned way pays

Let's Get Crazy

The boundary-breaking body of Prince

When he died this week, he left behind more than just a legacy of great music. The Purple One had a gift for androgyny, a gender-defying energy that vanquished both propriety and prejudice — and did so in fine style.

'I'm gonna listen to my body tonight'

Hey, Harriet

Harriet Tubman bumps Andrew Jackson from the front of the $20 bill

The decision caps a public campaign asking for a woman to be placed on American paper currency. It also means that Alexander Hamilton, whose popularity got a Broadway boost, is safe on the $10 bill, after all.

Inside the money shuffle

NPR

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