Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: One of the most banned books of all time | Mollie Godfrey

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1998, a school district removed one of American literature's most acclaimed works from its curriculum. Parents pushing for the ban said the book was both "sexually explicit" and "anti-white." The book at the center of this debate was...
Instructional Video23:49
TED Talks

TED: The danger and devotion of fighting for women in Afghanistan | Tamana Ayazi and Kat Craig

12th - Higher Ed
The women of Afghanistan are being persecuted under Taliban rule, but they're not standing down. Filmmaker Tamana Ayazi chronicles the harrowing reality of one women's rights advocate -- Zarifa Ghafari, Afghanistan's youngest female...
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...
News Clip5:42
PBS

U.S. sees concerning rise in STIs, congenital syphilis with no signs of slowing

12th - Higher Ed
New CDC data shows a surge of sexually transmitted infections in the U.S. in recent years. The most significant rise is in syphilis and congenital syphilis, which occurs when mothers pass on the infection to their babies during...
News Clip6:51
PBS

How Glory Edim's Online Book Club Provides Community For 'Invisible' Black Women

12th - Higher Ed
Glory Edim is the founder of Well-Read Black Girl, a book club that has transformed into an online community and literary festival, all celebrating voices that otherwise might not be heard. She talks with Jeffrey Brown about her original...
News Clip4:11
PBS

Female CEO paving the way in male-dominated construction industry

12th - Higher Ed
There's been a boom in female entrepreneurship in cities around the country, but when it comes to construction, there remains a lag. For Nellie Torres, a woman of color, it was doubly challenging to enter the industry. After years of not...
News Clip6:17
PBS

Low-wage immigrant workers are especially vulnerable to sexual abuse. How can they say #MeToo?

12th - Higher Ed
Every day, about 50 people are sexually assaulted or raped in the workplace in the U.S. While the entertainment industry and the political world have been in the headlines, the problem extends to those who work in hotels, clean...
News Clip4:11
PBS

Mountain climbing gives Afghan girls a chance to breathe free

12th - Higher Ed
Few are brave enough to climb Afghanistan's rugged mountains. But for women, harassment from extremist groups make practicing outdoor sports even more difficult. A new organization is helping women find peace living in the war-stricken...
News Clip9:04
PBS

In Afghanistan, Biden Inherits America's Longest War And Trump's Peace Deal

12th - Higher Ed
Last year, the Trump administration signed a deal with the Taliban that would have U.S. and NATO troops out of Afghanistan by May 1. But with the U.S. presence in the country about to enter its third decade, peace talks between the...
News Clip7:32
PBS

Surfer girls make waves and defy expectations in Bangladesh

12th - Higher Ed
In Bangladesh's only beach town, there are just a handful of girls who ride the waves. In fact, most people there frown upon seeing girl surfers, who have faced threats from conservative Muslims in the neighborhood. But surfing makes...
News Clip6:59
PBS

Anita Hill on the Thomas hearings, 25 years later: ÔI would do it againÕ

12th - Higher Ed
Twenty-five years ago, Anita Hill testified about sexual harassment from then-nominee Clarence Thomas. Now a new HBO film dramatizes the high-profile political battle that captured the nationÕs attention and changed Supreme Court...
News Clip10:03
PBS

Harnessing Boys' Strengths & Passions to Improve Academic Achievement (May 7, 2014)

12th - Higher Ed
Increasingly, boys appear to be falling behind girls academically. Test statistics, grades and college degrees are part of the story, but experts are also concerned about the messages young men get about masculinity. Gwen Ifill talks...
News Clip10:11
PBS

What Ronan Farrow Discovered About The Systems That Cover Up Sexual Misconduct

12th - Higher Ed
Ronan Farrow’s explosive reporting on movie mogul Harvey Weinstein’s alleged sexual misconduct helped launch the MeToo movement in 2017 and won him a Pulitzer Prize in 2018. In his latest book, Farrow accuses NBC, his former employer, of...
News Clip7:42
PBS

How human traffickers trap women into domestic servitude

12th - Higher Ed
More than three million women are forced into servitude as domestic workers every year, often lured to other countries in the Persian Gulf or Middle East under false pretenses. Special correspondent Fred de Sam Lazaro reports on ways...
News Clip5:37
PBS

A Culinary Tradition For The Persian New Year

12th - Higher Ed
Nowruz, the Persian holiday celebrating the new year, is observed in Iran and parts of Western and Central Asia. It marks the first day of the vernal equinox. Najmieh Batmanglij, author of eight cookbooks on Iranian cuisine that are...
News Clip9:44
PBS

Why Nigeria has more HIV-positive infants than anywhere else

12th - Higher Ed
Preventing mother-to-child HIV transmission is considered one of the most basic goals for curtailing the AIDS epidemic, and Nigeria is struggling mightily. In our series The End of AIDS, William Brangham and Jason Kane examine why this...
News Clip8:19
PBS

Why Angelina Jolie Decided to Undergo

12th - Higher Ed
In a New York Times op-ed, actress Angelina Jolie disclosed she had a preventative double mastectomy because she carries a greater genetic risk of developing breast cancer. Gwen Ifill talks with genetic counselor Beth Peshkin of...
News Clip9:39
PBS

Conversation with Dorothy Height

12th - Higher Ed
Gwen Ifill talks with Dorothy Height, a legend of the civil rights movement and former head of the National Council of Negro Women, about her memoir, "Open Wide the Freedom Gates."
News Clip10:19
PBS

Memphis midwives work to address racial disparities in care

12th - Higher Ed
More women in America die from pregnancy-related complications than in any other developed country in the world, and black women are most affected. NewsHour Weekend's Ivette Feliciano reports on one clinic in Memphis, Tennessee, where...
News Clip6:52
PBS

Abortion Kolbert

12th - Higher Ed
A leaked early draft of a coming Supreme Court decision suggests Roe v. Wade could be struck down. The landmark decision established the constitutional right to abortion and the last major challenge to it came in a 1992 case called...
News Clip9:35
PBS

Former ABC journalist says Mark Halperin allegations reflect harmful female objectification in TV news

12th - Higher Ed
Numerous women have come forward to allege that political journalist and author Mark Halperin harassed them while he was at ABC. One of those journalists, Lara Setrakian, now the executive editor of News Deeply, joins Judy Woodruff...
News Clip10:27
PBS

The little-known story of the Republican Party’s 1st presidential nominee

12th - Higher Ed
In a new book, NPR’s Steve Inskeep has chronicled the little-known story of how the illegitimate son of an immigrant rose to become the Republican Party’s first presidential nominee in 1856 -- with a lot of help from his wife. Lisa...
News Clip9:07
PBS

As Taliban Peace Talks Resume, What's At Stake For Afghan Women?

12th - Higher Ed
During his surprise Thanksgiving trip to Afghanistan, President Trump announced he had restarted talks with the Taliban.The ability of the conflict-wracked nation to achieve peace is at stake -- but so is progress for women, who could...
News Clip7:27
PBS

Melinda Gates on her foundation’s work and the need to ‘lift up women’ worldwide

12th - Higher Ed
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation is the world's largest private philanthropic organization, with an endowment of $50 billion. Melinda Gates plays a huge role in shaping its work, and her new book, The Moment of Lift: How Empowering...