stem
The four major disciplines propelling our students and our society forward; all about education in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.
The Boy Who Saw Dancing Letters
When Arman was seven years old, school felt like a battlefield. While other children easily read the alphabet on the blackboard, the letters in front of him seemed to move and dance. The capital A, B, and C refused to stay still. Sometimes he wrote b instead of d, and other times p looked exactly like q to him. No matter how hard he tried, the words refused to stay in place.
By zohaib ahmadabout 3 hours ago in Education
Income vs. Net Worth
When people talk about “being rich,” they often focus on how much money someone makes. A person with a six-figure salary may seem wealthy at first glance. However, income alone doesn’t tell the full financial story. Two people can earn the same salary and still have drastically different levels of wealth. The key reason lies in the difference between **income** and **net worth**.
By AnthonyBTV3 days ago in Education
72% of Americans Rely on a Secondary Income
The idea of having a single job that comfortably supports your lifestyle used to be the norm in the United States. For decades, many Americans expected that a full-time job would cover housing, food, healthcare, savings, and even leisure. Today, however, that reality is changing.
By AnthonyBTV4 days ago in Education
LLMs in Education Market Forecast to Hit USD 127.9 Bn by 2034: Transforming Digital Learning Worldwide. AI-Generated.
Introduction The LLMs in Education market refers to the use of large language models within digital learning platforms, academic institutions, and corporate training systems. Large language models such as OpenAI’s GPT systems and Google’s Gemini are designed to process and generate human-like text, enabling tutoring, content creation, assessment support, and personalized feedback. These models are integrated into learning management systems, virtual classrooms, and mobile applications. The market is projected to reach USD 127.9 billion by 2034, reflecting rapid digital transformation across global education systems.
By Roberto Crum11 days ago in Education
Graduated… But Still Broke. Why
Graduation day feels like victory. The hall is full. Names are called one by one. Parents sit proudly in the audience, holding their phones high to record the moment. Friends clap loudly. Teachers smile with approval. For years, this was the goal. Study hard. Get good grades. Earn the degree. And when that certificate finally rests in your hands, it feels like a passport to success. But sometimes, the applause is louder than the opportunity that follows.
By Shahid Zaman13 days ago in Education
What the System Forces You to Become
The Question the System Replaces By the time a person has passed through employment law, healthcare coverage rules, unemployment insurance, disability determination, and benefit eligibility, the relevant question has already shifted without ever being stated out loud. It is no longer whether the system helped or failed them. It is whether they managed to remain legible long enough to survive it. Each institutional layer imposes requirements that appear reasonable when viewed in isolation, yet become coercive when experienced sequentially:
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast14 days ago in Education
The Protection-of-Innocence Reciprocity Doctrine. AI-Generated.
Core Moral Premise The highest duty of any legitimate social order is the protection of innocent life. Innocent life has absolute moral primacy. Any system that systematically insulates predators, tolerates predatory asymmetry, rewards hypocrisy, or allows aggressors to retain insulation has inverted its purpose and forfeited legitimacy. Truth, justice, reciprocity, humility, mercy, forgiveness, and vertical accountability are structural necessities rather than optional virtues. Vertical accountability means recognition of and submission to a moral law higher than oneself. Authority must flow toward those who most consistently demonstrate sustained competence in moral and epistemic discipline. This competence is shown through observable conduct and trajectory over time, not through doctrinal label, tribal identity, credential alone, or self-profession.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast20 days ago in Education
THE STAR
On the first day of the new year, astronomers across the world announced that the motion of the planet Neptune had become irregular. The discovery came almost simultaneously from several observatories. At first, ordinary people paid little attention. Many had never even heard of Neptune.
By Amelia Miller22 days ago in Education
A Slip Under The Microscope
The laboratory was warm and yellow-lit, while outside a grey fog pressed against the windows. Glass jars with dissected animals stood on each table, and shelves held preserved specimens and anatomical drawings. The students had just left for a lecture, leaving the demonstrator alone with the quiet clicking of his microtome.
By Amelia Miller25 days ago in Education
Before Time Began: The Astonishing Story of the Big Bang and the Birth of Our Universe. AI-Generated.
What if everything you have ever known—every star in the sky, every planet, every grain of sand, and even time itself—once existed inside a space smaller than a single atom? This breathtaking idea is not science fiction. It is the foundation of the Big Bang theory, the scientific explanation for how our universe began nearly 13.8 billion years ago.
By Antonuos Zarey30 days ago in Education








