News Clip2:33
PBS

I'm not making trouble. I'm making progress'

12th - Higher Ed
With all of the revelations of sexual misconduct and the toppling of famous directors, actors and anchors, one would think that it's easier to come forward and speak out. Nope, says Nell Scovell. The veteran TV writer and creator offers...
News Clip6:11
PBS

Why is women’s sexual health so understudied?

12th - Higher Ed
When it comes to medical research and innovation, men's health has long gotten more attention than women's health. Even with improvements over the last 30 years, women's sexual health remains vastly underrepresented. Dr. Rachel Rubin,...
News Clip5:53
PBS

Pakistanis build climate-resilient homes in aftermath of devastating floods

12th - Higher Ed
Pakistan is struggling to recover from last year’s cataclysmic flooding that killed more than 1,700. It was the latest in a string of weather-related disasters the country has faced over the past two decades, prompting calls to make...
News Clip8:17
PBS

Women leading Danish mosque challenge patriarchy and right-wing religious control

12th - Higher Ed
Along with Scandinavia's first female imam, Mariam mosque in Copenhagen is reinterpreting the Koran with a focus on women's rights, including the right to marry outside the faith and file for divorce. NewsHour Weekend Special...
News Clip9:25
PBS

Lynne Cheney: A is for Abigail

12th - Higher Ed
Lynne Cheney, author of "A is for Abigail: An Almanac of Amazing American Women" (Oct. 1, 2003) (Author Interview)
News Clip10:01
PBS

Female Marine recruits strive to meet same standards as men (Pt. 2)

12th - Higher Ed
For generations combat jobs in the U.S. military were blocked to women, but not anymore. The question now is can women meet the same rigorous standards as the men in order to qualify for frontline jobs? William Brangham has the second...
News Clip10:46
PBS

What Does it Mean to be a Girl? How Parents Can Help Daughters Decide for Themselves (May 6, 2014)

12th - Higher Ed
In the last few decades, a multi-billion dollar industry has evolved around princess stories and toys. But in contrast to this pink and purple "girlie" world are alternatives emphasizing more diverse interests and portraying different...
News Clip7:22
PBS

Yearning For ‘Peace,’ When A Greek Refugee Camp Has Become Hell

12th - Higher Ed
Five years into Europe's migration crisis, the conditions in the notorious Moria camp on the Greek island of Lesbos are hellish. Refugee children are especially vulnerable, facing hunger, bad sanitation and the threat of violence....
News Clip4:59
PBS

How Muslim Women's Fashion Is Shaping Conversation Around Creativity And Power

12th - Higher Ed
What's long been referred to as the "modest" fashion of Muslim women has grown into a major industry generating hundreds of billions of dollars annually. The first U.S. museum exhibit highlighting Islamic culture within the context of...
News Clip6:20
PBS

The founder of #MeToo doesnÕt want us to forget victims of color

12th - Higher Ed
Millions of people have shared personal stories of sexual assault and harassment using the hashtag #MeToo. Now the woman behind the original Me Too campaign, created more than a decade ago, wants to make sure marginalized voices...
News Clip6:05
PBS

40 Years Later, The Era Is Still Not A Part Of The Constitution

12th - Higher Ed
Forty years ago, Congress approved the Equal Rights Amendment, guaranteeing protection from discrimination on the basis of sex -- but it has never been ratified as a constitutional amendment. Now a campaign to ratify the ERA is gathering...
News Clip6:25
PBS

How This Philanthropist Hopes To Boost Mid-Career Women Artists

12th - Higher Ed
The work of women artists makes up only 3 to 5 percent of major museums' permanent collections in the U.S. and Europe. Many of these artists struggle financially -- but Susan Unterberg is trying to change that. For decades, the artist...
News Clip10:17
PBS

Isolation and stigma sustain HIV in the South: 'It's like we're on a deserted island'

12th - Higher Ed
In the rural South, poverty, prejudice and lack of health care are exacerbating the spread of HIV, making it the epicenter of HIV/AIDS in America. William Brangham and Jason Kane, along with Jon Cohen of Science magazine, meet some who...
Instructional Video7:37
Crash Course

Sex Discrimination: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
Today, Craig is going to talk about employment discrimination, and we're going to focus primarily on women in the workforce. Discrimination against women tends to be handled somewhat differently in the courts as they are not a minority....
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

The Most Common Eating Disorder You’ve Never Heard Of

12th - Higher Ed
When you think about an eating disorder, you might imagine restricting or purging food. But the most common eating disorder has nothing to do with either of those, and chances are you’ve never heard of it.
Instructional Video4:32
TED-Ed

What causes migraines? | Marianne Schwarz

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A throbbing, pounding headache. Bright zigzagging lines across your field of vision. Sensitivity to light, lingering fatigue, disrupted sleep. While an incapacitating headache is one of the most common symptoms, a migraine can include...
Instructional Video12:04
Crash Course

Protests East and West: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
The post-World War II decades in Europe are sometimes called the Thirty Glorious Years. As those years wore on, tensions between East and West grew, and economic growth slowed or was unevenly distributed across Europe, protests and...
Instructional Video12:40
Crash Course

Rules, Rule-Breaking, and French Neoclassicism: Crash Course Theater #20

12th - Higher Ed
Everyone knows, you need a bunch of rules to make good theater. That's what the French thought in the 17th century, anyway. The French Neoclassical revival had a BUNCH of French playwrights following a bunch of rules. Unsurprisingly,...
Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Did the Amazons really exist? - Adrienne Mayor

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It was long assumed that Amazons, the fierce and fearsome women warriors of Greece, were imaginary. But curiously enough, stories from ancient Egypt, Persia, the Middle East, Central Asia, India and China also featured Amazon-like...
Instructional Video11:35
Curated Video

Let's Talk About Sex: Crash Course Psychology

12th - Higher Ed
Sex is complicated for different reasons in different cultures. But, it's the entire purpose of life, so there's no reason to blush. In this episode of Crash Course Psychology, Hank talks about Kinsey, Masters and Johnson, Sexuality,...
Instructional Video12:19
Curated Video

The Seven Years War: Crash Course World History

12th - Higher Ed
In which John teaches you about the Seven Years War, which may have lasted nine years. Or as many as 23. It was a very confusing was. The Seven Years War was a global war, fought on five continents, which is kind of a lot. John focuses...
Instructional Video12:08
TED Talks

TED: How to share public money fairly | Maja Bosnic

12th - Higher Ed
We have the right to demand budgets to be equitable, to be fair, says economist Maja Bosnic. One way to get there is to make them gender-responsive. With examples from the nearly 80 countries around the world already factoring gender...
Instructional Video12:43
Curated Video

Fall of The Roman Empire...in the 15th Century: Crash Course World History

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you about the fall of the Roman Empire, which happened considerably later than you may have been told. While the Western Roman Empire fell to barbarians in 476 CE, the Byzantines in Constantinople continued...
Instructional Video11:49
Crash Course

Anita Hill and Clarence Thomas: Crash Course Black American History #46

12th - Higher Ed
Today, Clint will teach you about the Supreme Court confirmation hearing of Clarence Thomas. During the screening process, Anita Hill came forward alleging that Thomas had sexually harassed her when the two of them worked together at the...