Instructional Video2:42
Curated Video

Pauli Murray: Breaking Barriers of Race and Gender

9th - Higher Ed
As a queer Black lawyer, poet and civil rights activist, Pauli Murray understood how our different identities can overlap to create multiple levels of discrimination. Her groundbreaking work in championing equality for all helped change...
Instructional Video2:29
Curated Video

Katherine Johnson: Trailblazing NASA Mathematician

9th - Higher Ed
At a time when American space exploration was dominated by men, mathematician Katherine Johnson broke through gender and racial barriers to help change our understanding of the cosmos forever.
Instructional Video2:22
Curated Video

Civil War Female Spies

9th - Higher Ed
In a world traditionally dominated by men, female spies took advantage of gender stereotypes to go unnoticed and gather information during the U.S. Civil War.
Instructional Video3:56
Curated Video

South Africa Interpersonal Relationships

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewSouth Africa’s liberal constitution grants all people equal status, regardless of their gender, race, religion, sexual orientation, or other characteristics. In practice, though, a large segment of the society is committed to preserving...
Instructional Video4:17
Wonderscape

Thurgood Marshall: The First African American Supreme Court Justice

K - 5th
This video explores Thurgood Marshall’s historic appointment to the Supreme Court in 1967 by President Lyndon Johnson and his legacy as a justice. Known for his strong stance on civil rights, Justice Marshall advocated for the rights of...
Instructional Video15:00
Institute for New Economic Thinking

Black Women's 'Double Gap' in Wages

Higher Ed
Black women are forfeiting $50 BILLION each year in the US due to the combined gender & racial wage gap. Michelle Holder discusses her recent paper, "The Double Gap and the Bottom Line: African American Women’s Wage Gap and Corporate...
Instructional Video21:47
Curated Video

Exploring Maya Angelou's 'Equality'

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Pupil outcome: I can explore Maya Angelou's 'Equality'. Key learning points: - 'Equality' sees a speaker demand equality so that she can be "free". - Arguably, the poem presents racial and gender inequality that Angelou experienced as a...
Instructional Video2:04
Curated Video

Patsy Mink: Changing the Rules

9th - Higher Ed
The first Asian American woman ever to be elected to Congress, Patsy Mink dedicated her life to participating in the democratic process and improving the lives of others.
Instructional Video2:17
Curated Video

South Africa Customs and Values

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe complexity and diversity that characterize South Africa’s cultural and ethnic landscape translate into a wide range of customs and values. You’ll see them exposed in virtually all aspects of daily life and interpersonal...
Instructional Video11:29
Curated Video

Bessie Coleman for Kids | Bedtime History

K - 5th
Bessie Coleman was a trailblazing aviator and the first African American woman and first Native American woman to hold a pilot's license. Born in 1892 in Texas, Bessie faced racial and gender barriers in her pursuit of aviation. She...
Instructional Video5:23
Wonderscape

Katherine Johnson: NASA's Hidden Figure and Math Genius

K - 5th
Discover the story of Katherine Johnson, a pioneering mathematician who broke racial and gender barriers at NASA. Learn how her calculations made space missions possible, including John Glenn's historic orbit and the early space shuttle...
Instructional Video15:36
TED Talks

TED: How to solve the education crisis for boys and men | Richard Reeves

12th - Higher Ed
While studying inequality and social mobility, Richard Reeves made a surprising discovery: in some countries, like the US and UK, boys are drastically lagging behind girls across many academic measures. He explains why these struggles in...
Instructional Video2:27
Curated Video

Polly Bemis: Chinese Immigrant Pioneer

9th - Higher Ed
Sold into slavery by her parents, Polly Bemis faced discrimination as a Chinese immigant in America – but became something of a pioneer of the West.
Instructional Video3:05
Curated Video

1619: The Legacy of Slavery in America

9th - Higher Ed
1619 was a significant year in the history of America for better and for worse. In Jamestown, Virginia the first slaves were imported and sold. Meet Nikole Hannah-Jones; author of New York Times' "1619 Project" who will examine the...
Instructional Video3:01
Curated Video

Octavia Butler

9th - Higher Ed
First popularized as a genre of literature in the 1920s, for decades science fiction was dominated by white male authors. That is until Octavia Butler, an African American woman, rewrote the script.
Instructional Video2:27
Curated Video

Barbara Jordan: The Black Texan Politician who Broke the Glass Ceiling

9th - Higher Ed
At a time when women and people of colour were all but excluded from the US government, one woman stormed the corridors of power and made them her own. This is the story of Barbara Jordan, the African American from the South who defied...
Instructional Video2:08
Curated Video

Lyndon B. Johnson: The Great Society Speech

9th - Higher Ed
In 1964, 36th U.S. President, Lyndon B. Johnson commanded the heart of the nation while delivering his "The Great Society" speech. Can you hear any parallels to modern-day America?
Instructional Video2:07
Curated Video

Claudette Colvin: The Original Rosa Parks

9th - Higher Ed
You know the story of David and Goliath, right? Well, America has its own version. Only our hero is 15-year-old African-American, school girl Claudette Colvin and in 1955, she took on the State of Alabama for real. The original Rosa Parks!
Instructional Video2:19
Curated Video

William Jennings Bryan: Flag of an Empire Speech

9th - Higher Ed
Former U.S. Secretary of State, William Jennings Bryan spoke in Indianapolis back in 1900 on the opposition of Imperialism within America. The speech has since been entitled Flag of an Empire.
Instructional Video1:57
Curated Video

Bayard Rustin: Martin Luther King Jr's 'Out and Proud' Advisor

9th - Higher Ed
The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom was the biggest protest America had ever seen. It culminated in Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King Jr’s iconic “I Have A Dream” speech. But the man who made it all possible, chief...
Instructional Video1:56
Curated Video

The Battle of the Sexes

9th - Higher Ed
Although half of Americans are female, women make up just 25% of Congress. In fact, women have been treated unfairly in America since day one – but what are the causes of that inequality and what are the effects?
Instructional Video2:43
Curated Video

Ernestine Rose

9th - Higher Ed
A pioneering suffragette and free thinker, Ernestine Rose was way ahead of her time. Described as the “first Jewish feminist”, she used her voice to campaign for women’s rights and improve the lives of millions.
Instructional Video21:10
Wonderscape

Social Studies Kids: Cultural Diversity

K - 5th
This video explores the importance of cultural diversity and multiculturalism. It discusses the definition of culture, the benefits of embracing diverse perspectives, and the barriers to multiculturalism. It also provides suggestions for...
Instructional Video13:25
Curated Video

Meet Naomi Klein, Author of ’On Fire' | One Small Step | NowThis

9th - 11th
Award-winning author Naomi Klein’s latest book, ‘On Fire,’ makes the case for a Green New Deal and captures the urgency of the climate crisis in a set of expansive long-form essays. » Subscribe to NowThis Future:...