ED 262 KCKCC Sp '24
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Scooped by Dennis Swender from Confronting hate, prejudice, cruelty, extremism, and dogmatism
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Gender Empowerment and Education

"In this exclusive, unedited interview, 'I Am Malala' author Malala Yousafzai remembers the Taliban's rise to power in her Pakistani hometown and discusses her efforts to campaign for equal access to education for girls. Malala Yousafzai also offers suggestions for people looking to help out overseas and stresses the importance of education."


Via Catherine Hislop, Dana Hoffman, Jocelyn Stoller
analise moreno's curator insight, October 14, 2014 8:01 PM

This was one of our focuses last chapter. I totally agree with this because woman and as well as men deserve education they need education to have a successful life. I like how she describes this so well and thoroughly she talks about what she wants and needs in her life.

Courtney Barrowman's curator insight, May 21, 2015 4:10 PM

unit 3 or 6

Raychel Johnson's curator insight, May 25, 2015 8:42 PM

Summary: In this interview, Jon Stewart talks with Malala Yousafzai, a girl who outwardly fought for women's education, and in doing so, was shot by the Taliban. Even now, she continues to fight for women's equality and their right to education, after she won her Nobel Peace Prize. 

 

Insight: In this interview, the main topic is gender equality, and how it can lead to better education for women, which, in turn, gives women more power. Although developed countries, especially in Western Europe, already display high gender equality, more developing countries, especially in the Middle East, have hardly anything close to gender equality. Even with low amounts of gender equality, people like Malala and advocates in Western countries are striving towards this goal of gender equality.

Scooped by Dennis Swender from Confronting hate, prejudice, cruelty, extremism, and dogmatism
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Survey Finds Harassment Pervasive on Social Media [Infographic]

Survey Finds Harassment Pervasive on Social Media [Infographic] | ED 262 KCKCC Sp '24 | Scoop.it
While the Internet has brought more connectivity to the world, the Web is not without its challenges.

Via John van den Brink, malek, Deanna Dahlsad, Jocelyn Stoller
malek's curator insight, June 7, 2014 9:34 AM

No wonder outspoken women  get more than fair share of harassment online. Here's the Fatitude film maker who received rape threats.