Psychology
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Age isn’t everything when deciding if a child is ready to be home alone
5 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 10, 2025We all live in glass houses now
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, Sep. 17, 2025The big meaning behind micro-relationships, and why we should talk to strangers more
8 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 10, 2025Winnipeg Jewish Theatre’s therapy-set two-hander plays with reality
4 minute read Preview Monday, Sep. 15, 2025Blame game after acts of political violence can lead to further attacks, experts warn
7 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 10, 2025Most US adults think individual choices keep people in poverty, a new AP-NORC/Harris poll finds
6 minute read Preview Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025Onslaught of sports betting ads make gambling seem enticing to youth, doctors say
4 minute read Preview Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025For elders with dementia, youth with anxiety, or evacuees coping with displacement, smoke is not just a public health irritant. It’s an accelerant for mental health issues.
You can’t put an N95 on your brain. You can’t tell your nervous system to calm down when the air outside looks like dusk at noon.
For older adults, people with asthma, families on fixed incomes, or those living in crowded apartments or trailers, wildfire season in Manitoba is more than just a nuisance. It’s a trigger. Of breathlessness. Of panic. Of helplessness.
And every year, the advice is the same:
Family of student killed in encounter with police threatens civil lawsuit
3 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 5, 2025Ryan Reynolds suggests swapping phones with a MAGA supporter, checking out their algorithm
2 minute read Preview Thursday, Dec. 4, 2025Hydro rejects generator option for evacuated community
4 minute read Preview Friday, Sep. 5, 2025Elon Musk’s Neuralink brain chip implanted into two quadriplegic Canadian patients
4 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 10, 2025Girls fell behind boys in math during the pandemic. Schools are trying to make up lost ground
7 minute read Preview Friday, Oct. 10, 2025Hotel-weary evacuees guests at powwow
3 minute read Preview Saturday, Aug. 30, 2025Africa: The cartographic (and demographic) truth
5 minute read Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2025Two Africa-based advocacy groups, Africa No Filter and Speak Up Africa, launched a “Change the Map” campaign in April.
“When whole generations, in Africa and elsewhere, learn from a distorted map, they develop a biased view of Africa’s role in the world,” said Speak Up founder Fara Ndiaye — but hardly anybody outside Africa noticed.
That may be changing, because earlier this month the 55-member African Union endorsed the campaign, making it a diplomatic issue as well. The claim is that the traditional Mercator map of the world shows the African continent as hardly any bigger than Europe, whereas in reality it is at least four times as big.
That’s all very well, and it’s true that Mercator’s map projection dates from the 16th century, when European ocean-going ships were expanding and transforming everybody’s view of the world. But it’s also true that all flat maps distort the surface of a sphere (like the Earth) one way or another. Choose your poison, but you can’t have it all.