Instructional Video15:21
Institute for New Economic Thinking

What Tax Records Can Tell Us About Gender Inequality

Higher Ed
Professor Casarico explains why her focus on gender and the “glass ceiling” can help us push forward economic thinking. She also explains the importance of looking at income rather than earnings, using tax records in a novel way....
Instructional Video4:14
Global Health with Greg Martin

6 ways that Gender affects Health

Higher Ed
What is Gender? What is inequity? And what do they have to do with Public Health and Global Health? This video explores the relationship between gender and health and highlight 6 important ways in which the health of men and women can be...
Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

The Best Ways to Keep Your Mind Young

12th - Higher Ed
You might feel like your thinking has been getting a bit slower and foggier as you get older, and that eventually happens to everybody. But how can we keep our minds young?
Instructional Video1:17:28
Curated Video

The Equality Lecture: Professor Mary Evans – The Persistence of Gender Inequality

6th - 11th
In the seventh annual British Sociological Association/British Library Equality Lecture, held on 23 October 2017, Professor Mary Evans questioned the notion that gender equality has been largely achieved in the ‘first’ world. She drew on...
Instructional Video15:02
Institute for New Economic Thinking

How Race and Gender Reinforce Economic Inequality

Higher Ed
Prof. Marlene Kim says her research has revealed that African-American women face triple penalties from race and gender bias, and the combination of those two
Instructional Video14:12
Curated Video

Caravaggio's Taking of Christ: Great Art Explained

9th - Higher Ed
The Taking of Christ is a painting by Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio. The subject is the moment that the son of God is betrayed with a kiss, and arrested in the garden of Gethsemane. Caravaggio’s approach to religious art was shocking...
Instructional Video3:24
Global Health with Greg Martin

Gender-Based Violence and Violence Against Women - a public health issue

Higher Ed
In this video, we look at gender-based violence (and violence against women, including domestic violence and rape) and take a look at what we as individuals and as a society can do to address the problem. Things like promoting gender...
Instructional Video7:37
Packt

How FOR Loops Work - with Example

Higher Ed
This video demonstrates through an example how to work with FOR loops. This clip is from the chapter "Java Object Oriented Programming System (OOPS) Basic for Selenium Part - 1" of the series "Selenium WebDriver with Java - Basics to...
Instructional Video21:04
Institute for New Economic Thinking

Breaking the Glass Ceiling

Higher Ed
Inequality takes many forms, such as wealth inequality, or inequality amongst northern and southern hemisphere nations (the developed vs developing economies). One can make the case that gender inequality has been with us the longest,...
Instructional Video4:30
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the secret sauce riddle? | Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
One of the top chefs from Pasta Palace has been kidnapped by operatives from Burger Bazaar hoping to learn the location of their secret sauce recipe. Little do they know that a third party— Sausage Saloon— has sent you, their top spy, to...
Instructional Video3:21
FuseSchool

Current & Potential Difference

6th - Higher Ed
Current & Potential Difference | Electricity | Physics | FuseSchool In this video we will be looking at how current relates to both resistance and potential difference, and how we record the potential difference and currents across...
Instructional Video7:19
Communication Coach Alex Lyon

4 Public Speaking Tips for More Confidence

Higher Ed
Let's look at 4 Tips Public Speaking Tips to help you gain more confidence. We'll be talking with Brenden from MasterTalk about the top tips he uses to coach his public speaking clients.
Instructional Video14:02
Institute for New Economic Thinking

Gender Equality Works for Everyone.

Higher Ed
According to Colorado State Professor Elissa Braunstein, macroeconomics has a habit of misunderstanding and even misrepresenting labor. As a result, we see increased gender conflict and structural inequalities in the labor force....
Instructional Video6:57
Curated Video

Converting Units of Weight in Real World Problems

K - 5th
This video teaches students how to solve real-world problems involving weights by converting larger units to smaller units. It explains common conversions in the customary weight system, such as ounces to pounds and pounds to tons.
Instructional Video10:17
Curated Video

DC Series circuits explained - The basics working principle

Higher Ed
Series circuits DC Direct current. In this video we learn how DC series circuits work, looking at voltage, current, resistance, power consumption as well as how to use a multimeter. There's also a problem at the end of the video for you...
Instructional Video8:24
Crash Course

Board Games: Crash Course Games

12th - Higher Ed
Today, we're going to talk about board games, but instead of trying to trace their histories, which we've already covered a bit of in ep2 on ancient games, we're going to look really closely at just two board games - Monopoly and The...
Instructional Video14:12
Institute for New Economic Thinking

Inclusive Growth: Making It Happen

Higher Ed
Gabriela Ramos is the OECD Chief of Staff and Sherpa to the G20. Since 2006, she has been advising and supporting the Secretary-General’s strategic agenda. As a Mexican woman working in at the OECD headquarters in Paris, she is uniquely...
Instructional Video2:23
Curated Video

Lozen: Fearless Apache Warrior

9th - Higher Ed
At a time when Apache men and women followed specific gender roles, Lozen defied convention – to become one of the finest warriors in the tribe's history.
Instructional Video11:38
TED Talks

TED: The truth about faking orgasms | Karen Gurney

12th - Higher Ed
Whose pleasure is prioritized during sex, and why? Psychosexologist Karen Gurney explains how a lack of equal pleasure in the bedroom actually reflects broader gender inequality in society -- and asks you to reconsider what dynamics are...
Instructional Video9:22
After Skool

The Dunning-Kruger Effect - Cognitive Bias - Why Incompetent People Think They Are Competent

12th - Higher Ed
In the field of psychology, the Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which people mistakenly assess their cognitive ability as greater than it is. It is related to the cognitive bias of illusory superiority and comes from the...
Instructional Video4:00
Curated Video

Fractions as a Sum of Parts on the Number Line

K - 12th
Decompose a fraction (x/y) into a sum of parts (a/y + b/y + ...) on the number line.
Instructional Video12:59
TED Talks

Deepa Narayan: 7 beliefs that can silence women -- and how to unlearn them

12th - Higher Ed
In India (and many other countries), girls and women still find themselves silenced by traditional rules of politeness and restraint, says social scientist Deepa Narayan. In this frank talk, she identifies seven deeply entrenched norms...
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

When Sled Dogs Saved an Alaskan Town

12th - Higher Ed
In 1925, 20 teams of sled dogs braved the harsh Alaskan winter to carry a package of diphtheria antitoxin over 1000 km to save a small town from a deadly outbreak!
Instructional Video18:49
TED Talks

TED: The urgency of intersectionality | Kimberle Crenshaw

12th - Higher Ed
Now more than ever, it's important to look boldly at the reality of race and gender bias -- and understand how the two can combine to create even more harm. Kimberle Crenshaw uses the term "intersectionality" to describe this phenomenon;...

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