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#Education

Articles tagged with "Education" - explore health, wellness, and travel insights.

1,835 articles
2 min read

Rethinking Everyday Habits: New Research Highlights Hidden Risks Behind Seemingly Harmless Actions

news health

Everyday routines are under a new spotlight as recent studies and online conversations reveal how small, overlooked behaviors can raise health and safety risks. Thai readers, in particular, may recognize habits from daily life that deserve a closer look—from charging devices overnight to crossing busy streets.

In a society that prizes efficiency, many people in Thailand rely on quick, multitasking habits. Walking while looking at a phone, using devices in bed, or handling electrical items with wet hands are common. New investigations, alongside public health data and anecdotal notes, suggest these actions accumulate risk over time and contribute to preventable injuries and health issues. A senior public health expert from a Thai university notes that “small risks add up; when viewed together, they drive avoidable accidents and chronic conditions.”

#publichealth #safety #thailand +6 more
5 min read

Rethinking Learning: The Essential Role of Unlearning in Education and Personal Growth

news psychology

Unlearning, a concept once relegated to the margins of educational theory and neuroscience, is taking center stage in 2025 as new research urges individuals and institutions to rethink how knowledge is acquired, updated, and, crucially, discarded. As global education systems and workforces grapple with fast-evolving information landscapes, being able to let go of outdated ideas is no longer a luxury—it’s a necessity for personal growth and organizational innovation (Psychology Today; WDHB).

#Unlearning #Education #Neuroscience +6 more
6 min read

The Bittersweet Nature of Nostalgia: New Study Reveals How Emotional Memory Evolves Over Time

news psychology

A groundbreaking new study has shed light on the emotional evolution of nostalgic memories, revealing that our fond reflections grow in complexity—and even sadness—the further we drift from their origin. This insight challenges previous assumptions about the stability of emotional memory and may have important implications for mental health, self-understanding, and how Thais relate to their own past.

Researchers from the University of Southampton have found that nostalgic memories are far from emotionally static. Using two separate experiments, participants were asked to recall nostalgic, ordinary, or neutral personal events and rate their emotional responses both at the time the event occurred and at the moment of recollection. According to the findings reported by Neuroscience News, the emotional tone of nostalgic memories shifts over time: while initially brimming with warmth and positivity, these memories tend to fade in brightness, making room for more negative emotions—particularly regret and loneliness.

#Nostalgia #Memory #MentalHealth +4 more
3 min read

Unlearning for Growth: Why Thai Education Must Embrace Rethinking What We Know

news psychology

Unlearning is moving from fringe theory to a central priority in 2025, as new research urges both individuals and institutions to reevaluate not just what we learn but what we discard. In fast-changing information landscapes, letting go of outdated ideas is essential for personal growth and organizational innovation, a message increasingly echoed by Thai educators and policymakers.

In Thailand, where reforms in education and workforce development are linked to national progress, the call to “learn to unlearn” resonates deeply. Data from leading research teams shows that unlearning goes beyond forgetting; it means consciously challenging beliefs that are incomplete, outdated, or based on flawed frameworks. The process requires humility and a tolerance for discomfort—qualities that can be hard to cultivate in environments that prize tradition and consistency.

#unlearning #education #neuroscience +6 more
3 min read

Working Mothers Boost Children’s Achievement and Well-Being: What Thai Families Should Know

news parenting

A comprehensive study from Harvard Business School shows that working mothers not only model professional achievement but also contribute to higher education attainment, better job outcomes, and greater happiness in their children. For Thai families facing growing workforce participation and evolving social expectations, the findings offer timely reassurance and practical implications.

Across 29 nations, including Asia, researchers analyzed data from more than 100,000 adults. They found that daughters of working mothers are more likely to be employed, reach supervisory roles, and earn higher wages. Globally, women with working mothers are 1.21 times more likely to be employed and 1.29 times more likely to supervise others. In the United States, daughters of working mothers earned about $1,880 more per year on average. These patterns suggest that a mother’s employment can positively shape children’s futures, regardless of the mother’s occupation level.

#workingmothers #education #thailand +5 more
4 min read

Game Theory at Work: How New Research Shows Strategic Thinking Can Transform Your Career

news psychology

Game theory, long associated with economics classrooms and high-stakes negotiations, is finding renewed relevance in the modern workplace, as recent psychology research highlights its potential to reshape how Thais can thrive in both local and global job markets. Insights featured in a new Forbes article by psychologist Mark Travers suggest that applying game theory principles thoughtfully—not rigidly—can help employees and leaders better navigate collaboration, motivation, and career advancement, even amidst complex social dynamics (Forbes).

#GameTheory #ThaiWorkplace #CareerStrategy +7 more
5 min read

Growing Up Thrifty: How Childhood Phrases Reveal Deep Social Lessons for Thai Families

news parenting

A recent article published by YourTango on May 23, 2025, has drawn widespread attention for highlighting 11 familiar phrases that resonate deeply with adults who grew up in financially constrained households. Titled “11 Phrases That Only Make Sense If You Were Raised By Broke Parents,” the piece unpacks the memorable quips and instructions many children heard, revealing far more than just humor or nostalgia—they reflect powerful social and psychological lessons about resilience, resourcefulness, and generational change (YourTango).

#Parenting #Thailand #FamilyFinance +7 more
3 min read

New Research Highlights the Profound Impact of Storytelling on Human Meaning and Memory

news psychology

A new commentary published in Psychology Today proposes that storytelling is not just a cultural practice but a central mechanism through which human beings seek meaning, transmit values, and retain memories—a perspective supported by recent psychological research and resonant in societies worldwide, including Thailand. The analysis, reflecting on perspectives from noted psychiatrist Viktor E. Frankl and memory pioneer Hermann Ebbinghaus, underscores that the stories we tell—whether in families, classrooms, or broader media—profoundly shape our sense of identity, purpose, and well-being. As digital media reshapes how stories are shared, deliberation grows about the social quality of today’s storytelling and its effects on collective and individual meaning.

#Storytelling #MentalHealth #ThaiCulture +7 more
3 min read

Reconsidering Tiger Parenting: New Insights for Thai Families on Child Wellbeing and Education

news parenting

A growing body of research challenges the hard-edged “tiger parenting” approach—an intensely disciplined, achievement-focused style popularized by Amy Chua’s book. Once linked to academic prowess and long-term success, recent findings suggest such strict methods can harm children’s mental health and emotional development. The discussion resonates in Thailand, where parental sacrifices for exam success are a familiar part of the culture.

Tiger parenting emphasizes high standards, rigid rules, and minimal freedom for children to pursue personal interests. It often means controlling study time, extracurriculars, and even social life, potentially sidelining hobbies, friendships, and rest. The spotlight on this approach intensified after Chua’s publication, which described strict routines and no allowances for ordinary childhood experiences.

#parenting #education #mentalhealth +7 more
3 min read

Rethinking Game Theory for Thai Workplaces: Turning Strategy into Career Growth

news psychology

In Thailand’s fast-changing economy, game theory can inform how professionals collaborate, stay motivated, and advance. A recent analysis suggests that applying game theory thoughtfully—without rigid rules—helps Thai employees and leaders navigate teamwork and global competition. The idea blends logic with psychology, recognizing how rewards and emotions shape effort.

Game theory studies strategic interactions where outcomes depend on others’ choices. Motivation, however, isn’t only a cold calculation. Brain science supports the “Expected Value of Control” concept: people invest effort when the potential reward matters and when they believe their actions can influence results. This aligns with core game-theory questions and underscores how mindset influences performance in Thai offices.

#gametheory #thaiworkplace #careerstrategy +7 more
2 min read

Storytelling as the Core of Meaning and Memory: What Thai readers should know

news psychology

Storytelling goes beyond entertainment. It is a central mechanism through which people seek meaning, pass values, and preserve memories. This concept aligns with current psychology research and holds relevance for Thai communities as well. The discussion revisits Viktor E. Frankl’s will to meaning and memory pioneer Hermann Ebbinghaus, emphasizing how the stories we share—in families, classrooms, and the media—shape identity, purpose, and well-being. As digital platforms broaden how stories travel, scholars question the social quality of today’s narratives and their impact on individual and collective meaning.

#storytelling #mentalhealth #thaiculture +6 more
5 min read

Strict "Tiger Parenting" Style Under Scrutiny: New Research Reveals Hidden Dangers for Children's Wellbeing

news parenting

A mounting body of research is challenging the conventional wisdom around the so-called “tiger parenting” style—a highly disciplined, achievement-oriented approach made famous by the global bestseller “Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.” While traditionally viewed as a pathway to academic excellence and long-term success, recent findings reveal that such strict parenting may inflict more harm than good, particularly in the realm of children’s mental health and emotional development. This conversation is especially salient for Thai families, where parental sacrifice for academic prosperity is often celebrated, echoing trends seen more widely across Asia.

#Parenting #Education #MentalHealth +7 more
3 min read

Thailand at a crossroads: balancing speed of AI with the patience of wisdom

news psychology

A new wave of research questions whether faster answers truly sharpen thinking. An analysis in Psychology Today argues that immediacy may erode deliberate reflection and suggests ways Thai society can reclaim thoughtful, growth-oriented thinking for individuals and communities.

Generative AI now delivers detailed responses on nearly every topic, transforming not just how we access information but how we feel, relate, and reason. Patience, vulnerability, and the slow maturation of ideas—once central to wisdom—face disruption as AI favors quick fixes and a sense of control that may mask shallow insight. Experts warn that time spent with uncertainty is being traded for instant gratification, altering a core aspect of the human experience.

#ai #knowledgevswisdom #digitalculture +5 more
4 min read

Thailand’s Battle Against Scammers: New Research Highlights Resilience of Transnational Networks

news thai

Thailand began a sweeping crackdown in early 2025 to shield its reputation as a regional business hub and protect citizens from scam networks. New research and expert analysis show the fight is protracted and, some warn, unwinnable in the near term as syndicates adapt, relocate, and persist despite government actions. The latest findings illuminate how deeply rooted and complex scam networks are across mainland Southeast Asia, especially along porous borders and in neighboring countries.

#thailand #cybercrime #transnationalcrime +12 more
3 min read

The Rule of Three: How Triads Shape Thai Learning, Communication, and Culture

news psychology

A simple number holds surprising power for how we think, tell stories, and make choices. A recent feature in Psychology Today shows why triads recur in myths, debates, and laws, offering insights relevant to education, marketing, and Thai traditions. For Thai readers, understanding this pattern can illuminate how we learn, speak, and honor cultural rituals.

From genie wishes to the Three Wise Men and Goldilocks’ bears, triads appear across narratives. Classic literature leans on threes too, with well-known phrases and tropes framed in three parts. The enduring presence invites a basic question: why this number? Why not four or five? The answer lies in how our brains detect rhythm and structure.

#psychology #cognition #education +7 more
3 min read

Thrifty Upbringing in Thailand: What Everyday Phrases Reveal About Resilience and Family Values

news parenting

A recent YourTango feature from May 23, 2025 spotlights 11 familiar phrases that resonate with adults who grew up in financially tight households. Titled 11 Phrases That Only Make Sense If You Were Raised By Broke Parents, the piece dives into the quips many children heard and how they reflect resilience, creativity, and changes across generations. The article mentions the original list as a gateway to understanding how money management and gratitude are learned in childhood.

#parenting #thailand #familyfinance +7 more
6 min read

Unraveling the Rule of Three: Why Our Minds Gravitate Toward Trios

news psychology

From childhood fairy tales to persuasive speeches, the number three casts a long shadow over the human imagination. A recent feature in Psychology Today, “The Rule of Three: Why We’re Fascinated by Trios,” delves into this fascinating cognitive tendency, exploring why threes appear so often in our stories, beliefs, and even laws. Understanding this preference offers insights not only into communication and culture but also into education, marketing, and even Thai traditions.

#psychology #cognition #education +7 more
2 min read

Calm, Clever Comebacks Backed by Science: A Win for Thai Readers Against Manipulation

news psychology

Manipulation can occur at work, in families, or online. In Thailand and beyond, many people have relied on restraint rather than confrontation. Now, research and expert guidance support a different approach: calm, witty comebacks that set boundaries without escalation. A well-known international guide on smart responses echoes these findings, showing that firm, measured replies can be an effective defense against manipulation.

For Thai audiences, the relevance is clear. Manipulative behaviors—gaslighting, guilt-tripping, twisting facts, or projecting negativity—can erode confidence in any setting. Recognizing these tactics matters as the country advances in education, workplaces, and digital life. Experts describe manipulation as actions intended to influence or control others for personal gain. The challenge is identifying covert coercion and responding in ways that protect well-being.

#mentalhealth #psychologicalmanipulation #communicationskills +8 more
3 min read

Handedness and Mental Health: Thai readers could benefit from deeper brain-diversity insights

news psychology

A comprehensive analysis finds that people with mental and neurodevelopmental disorders are about 50% more likely to be left-handed or mixed-handed than those without such diagnoses. The large synthesis draws on data from more than 202,000 individuals across 402 datasets and highlights a potential link between brain lateralization and mental health risk. The work is published in Psychological Bulletin and integrates findings from ten previous meta-analyses plus 33 newly released studies. Researchers tracked how handedness intersected with age, sex, diagnosis, and measurement methods to build a clearer picture of this complex relationship.

#handedness #mentalhealth #neurodevelopment +5 more
4 min read

Harnessing the Power of the Comeback: Modern Science Backs Verbal Defenses Against Manipulators

news psychology

When faced with manipulative tactics at work or in personal relationships, many Thais have long relied on subtlety and restraint, wary of direct confrontation. Yet the art of the calm, clever comeback is gaining traction worldwide, with new research and expert opinion now supporting what popular guides like the Times of India’s “10 clever comebacks to expose and outsmart a manipulator” recommend: standing your ground with measured, witty responses can be among the most effective defenses against psychological manipulation (timesofindia.indiatimes.com).

#MentalHealth #PsychologicalManipulation #CommunicationSkills +8 more
6 min read

Homemade vs. Processed Foods: New Research Challenges Nutrition Myths

news nutrition

A recent wave of scientific research is challenging some of the most cherished assumptions about homemade versus processed foods, revealing that the health benefits of cooking at home may not be as clear-cut as once believed. This new evidence, including a headline-grabbing study reported by Fox News and grounded in contemporary scientific literature, is pushing nutrition experts and the general public alike to reconsider what truly makes a diet healthy – a debate with significant relevance for Thai families navigating the fast-changing landscape of modern food choices (Fox News).

#nutrition #homemadefood #processedfoods +7 more
4 min read

Meal Timing Matters: Latest Research Reveals Best Eating Patterns Depend on Activity Level

news nutrition

A growing body of research shows that the ideal approach to meal timing may not be the same for everyone—especially when it comes to optimizing energy and performance. A recent article published by Outside Online and supported by leading sports nutrition experts suggests that whether it’s better to eat small, frequent meals or stick to three substantial ones largely depends on the individual’s activity level and goals (Outside Online).

For those striving to maximise athletic performance, eating habits can be just as important as the nutrients themselves. Nutrition experts reporting for Outside Online point out that food fuels athletic performance by supplying energy, aiding in recovery, and supporting the body’s critical functions during and after training. The three macronutrients—carbohydrates, fats, and proteins—all play essential roles, but timing and frequency of meals can affect how well the body absorbs and uses these nutrients.

#Health #Nutrition #SportsScience +6 more
2 min read

Narcissism and Social Media Addiction: What Thai readers should know

news mental health

A new synthesis of multiple studies shows that people with narcissistic traits are more prone to developing an addiction to social networking sites. The finding adds to growing concerns about how digital life affects mental health in Thailand and around the world.

Social platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and X (formerly Twitter) have reshaped how people connect, share, and present themselves. In Thailand, social media use remains high, with millions of users representing a large portion of the population. While this connectivity offers benefits, it also coincides with rising concerns about problematic or compulsive use, a behavior sometimes labeled as social media addiction. Research from international sources indicates a clear link between higher narcissism scores and greater engagement in compulsive online activity.

#socialmedia #mentalhealth #narcissism +7 more
3 min read

Narcissism Linked to Higher Risk of Social Media Addiction, New Research Finds

news mental health

Recent scientific research has revealed that individuals with narcissistic personality traits are more susceptible to developing an addiction to social networking sites, highlighting concerns about mental health in the digital age. This study, which synthesises findings from multiple prior investigations, offers important insights for Thai parents, teachers, and mental health professionals as social media use continues to surge across the kingdom.

The rise of social networking platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, and X (formerly Twitter) has dramatically changed the way people interact, share information, and cultivate their identities. According to recent statistics, Thailand is among the world’s most active countries on social media, with over 52 million users as of 2024, accounting for more than 74% of the population (DataReportal). This trend has facilitated both increased social connectedness and, unfortunately, a growing prevalence of problematic or compulsive usage, sometimes classified as social networking site addiction (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov).

#SocialMedia #MentalHealth #Narcissism +7 more