Few students likely to use print books for research
Only 12% of teachers say their students are "very likely" to use printed books in a research assignment.
Only 12% of teachers say their students are "very likely" to use printed books in a research assignment.
Nearly half of Americans say the country should mind its own business internationally and let other countries get along as best they can on their own.
U.S. families are relying less on their own resources and more on outside sources (scholarships, loans and the like) to pay for college.
Despite modestly positive macroeconomic trends, many Americans feel lukewarm or worse about the economy. Five less-common indicators may help explain why.
As President Obama prepares to make a "major" speech on the economy today, our past reports describe the challenges the middle class has faced in the past decades.
If you've ever woken up wondering "Is Bill Gates or Carlos Slim the world's richest person today?", Bloomberg's new visualization of data on the 100 richest billionaires is for you.
Liz Cheney’s decision to challenge Sen. Mike Enzi for re-election sets up a primary contest where the main difference appears to be generational, not ideological: Cheney, the 46-year-old daughter of former Vice President Dick Cheney, and Enzi, Wyoming’s 69-year-old third-term senior senator, both are conservative Republicans. “I think that part of the problem in Washington […]
Four in 10 U.S. adults are caring for a loved one with significant health issues.
While the Senate appears to have reached a deal on executive-branch appointments that heads off a showdown over filibuster rules, the fact that the confrontation went as far as it did points up the increasingly polarized state of Congress. From immigration reform to food stamps to student loans, it almost seems as if congressional Republicans and Democrats inhabit […]
45% of Americans say Congress should change the law to address sexual-assault problems in the military.