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...
Instructional Video8:11
Encyclopaedia Britannica

Britannica Insights: Women's Suffrage Movement

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Learn more about the women's suffrage movement in this interview with Dr. Colleen Shogan, vice chair of the Women's Suffrage Centennial Commission and senior vice president at the White House Historical Association, on the occasion of...
Instructional Video2:39
Curated Video

Courage: Elizabeth Eckford

9th - Higher Ed
Elizabeth Eckford's lone walk to Little Rock High School, amid fierce protests, became a symbol of courage in the fight against racial segregation.
Instructional Video10:34
Hip Hughes History

The Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) Explained

6th - 12th
HipHughes explains the Equal Rights Amendment and why it failed. From its spiritual birth in 1848 at Seneca Falls to its modern inception by Alice Paul in 1923 to its revival by NOW and passage in Congress to its ultimate death at the...
Instructional Video2:07
Curated Video

The Woman Suffrage Procession

9th - Higher Ed
The Women’s Suffrage Procession of 1913 changed how Americans protest – by getting bigger, better and more creative than ever before.
Instructional Video2:15
Curated Video

The Equal Rights Amendment: A Woman's Prerogative

9th - Higher Ed
The Equal Rights Amendment proposes to protect women and other marginalized genders under the U.S. Constitution - so why hasn't it been ratified?
Instructional Video2:03
Curated OER

Alice Paul

3rd - 8th
Who is Alice Paul? Students discuss this historical figure while reading text and displaying various images of her life.