Kevin Dickinson

Kevin Dickinson

A man with short gray hair and wearing a plaid shirt is seated at a wooden table in a dimly lit restaurant, smiling at the camera.

Kevin Dickinson is a staff writer and columnist at Big Think. His writing focuses on the intersection between education, psychology, business, and science. He holds a master’s in English and writing, and his articles have appeared in Agenda, RealClearScience, and the Washington Post. Follow him on LinkedIn and Twitter @KevinRDickinson.

Estonia has combined a belief in learning with equal-access technology to create one of world's best education systems.
The CDC's latest youth risk survey houses some scary numbers but shows that evidence-based sex education is working.
New research shows that neurons in autistic brains begin to developmentally diverge in early prenatal stages.
A new study shows that naming conventions will change how infants represent objects in their memories.
Pandemic rumors and information overload make separating fact from fancy difficult, putting people's health and lives at risk.
Parental anxieties stem from the complex relationship between technology, child development, and the internet's trove of unseemly content.
Most of Stonehenge's megaliths, called sarens, came from West Woods, Wiltshire.