2017
October
12
Thursday

Monitor Daily Podcast

October 12, 2017
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Girls can now become Eagle Scouts.

That rank has prestige beyond the Boy Scouts – signaling a work ethic and leadership skills on a résumé or college application.

To some, giving girls full access to the Boy Scouts of America (their Exploring and Venturing programs are already co-ed) marks progress toward gender equity. To others (including the Girl Scouts), it’s a misguided effort to stop a decline in membership by bowing to winds of social change – and the step erodes the group’s founding principles.

Ironically, this comes at a time when single-gender education in the United States is making a comeback.

While most research shows no measurable benefit to attending an all-boys or all-girls school, it does offer advantages for urban minority girls. To address a gender gap, there are growing numbers of all-girl public and charter schools focused on STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math). Early results show more young women graduating and taking on leadership roles in these fields.

If the Boy Scouts going co-ed produces better male and female leaders, and offers more choices for girls, speaking as a former Scout and parent of two daughters, that sounds like progress.

Now on to our five news stories, aimed at highlighting generosity, paths to progress, and innovation at work. 


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Christa Case Bryant/The Christian Science Monitor
Chris Butler, a hydrologist with the US Forest Service, was the acting district park ranger the day the Brian Head fire broke out. Here he visits a portion of the Dixie National Forest that was seared by the blaze. Three months later, the ground remains hard.
Howard LaFranchi/The Christian Science Monitor
A community health-care worker leads a pep rally at the Padre Rufo secondary school in the Santurce section of San Juan, Puerto Rico. The country's schools may be closed, but Padre Rufo is taking in children every day to work through post-hurricane Maria trauma and remind them that normal life goes on.
Courtesy of Central Arizona Project/Columbia University
Evaporation-harvested energy could cut the water lost to natural evaporation by half, researchers say. Water-strapped cities with growing populations and energy needs could benefit most, including greater Phoenix, served by the above reservoir and irrigation system fed by the Colorado River.

The Monitor's View

Reuters
Kobe Steel President and CEO Hiroya Kawasaki bows as he meets with the press Oct. 12 in Tokyo, Japan.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Rajesh Kumar Singh/AP
Indian potters stack earthen lamps in an oven in preparation for a Diwali festival in Allahabad, India. People buy earthen lamps to decorate their homes during Diwali, the annual Hindu festival of lights, which will be celebrated Oct 19.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Jacob Turcotte. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us today. Come back tomorrow: We’re looking at the recent string of major US hurricanes and wildfires – and what role humans play, if any, in fostering such disasters.

More issues

2017
October
12
Thursday
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