Can house calls cut hospital costs? Will “open textbooks” increase college affordability? What’s driving national economic inequality? Scroll down to see tweets from across the Institute this week about what’s important right now. Follow our @AspenInstitute list on Twitter for updates and to keep up with each program’s events, video, and experts, and let us know what you’re reading in the comments section below.
Learn about the growing solidarity between #BlackLivesMatter and young Palestinians. Read: http://t.co/O9iQUjUSNc via @WashingtonPost
— Aspen Institute (@AspenInstitute) October 15, 2015
Could using #OER for textbooks, which reduces the cost of #highered, increase #access for students? @csmonitor
http://t.co/ohaC0PH9J2
— College Excellence (@AspenHigherEd) October 15, 2015
Wealth inequality is way more complicated than just rich & poor. #raisethefloor http://t.co/RtK73Fbr3C
— Workforce Strategies (@AspenWorkforce) October 15, 2015
The US rehospitalization rate has increased 5% over the past 3 decades. The case for house calls: http://t.co/59Wshvw4xg via @NYTOpinion
— Aspen Institute (@AspenInstitute) October 14, 2015
U.S. Peace Corps sees 40-year high in applications for overseas program http://t.co/8f56r9gt9l
— Washington Post (@washingtonpost) October 14, 2015
Retweeted by @FranklinProj