Women’s History Month 2018: 21st Century Ladies

Natalie Portman women march

In 1987, the National Women’s History Project (NWHP) helped lead a campaign to launch Women’s History Month, a time designated for recognizing accomplishments made by women throughout history. In honor of the month-long celebration, seven inspiring facts about women today. 

The National Women’s History Project helped to launch a month-long celebration of women’s history in 1987. Above, Actress Natalie Portman is pictured attending the Women’s March on January 20, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.

Continue reading...

Forest Destruction is on the Rise

The impact of deforestation on wildlife and vegetation is immense. About 80 percent of the world’s land animals and plants call forests home. When their habitats are destroyed, many of them can’t survive. Instead, they are forced out of the woods as their food sources disappear, leading to more run-ins with humans.

Forests also play crucial roles in various ecological processes. For example, they remove greenhouse gases from the atmosphere, so forest destruction worsens climate change. They also play a part in the water cycle by helping to return water vapor into the atmosphere.  

With tree cover to shelter it from sunlight, the ordinarily rich soil in a former forest can dry out, making it much harder for those forests to recover.

Continue reading...

No Children Because of Climate Change? Some People Are Considering It

No Children because of Climate Change?

Add this to the list of decisions affected by climate change: Should I have children?

It is not an easy time for people to feel hopeful, with the effects of globalwarming no longer theoretical, projections becoming more dire and governmental action lagging. And while few, if any, studies have examined how large a role climate change plays in people’s childbearing decisions, it loomed large in interviews with more than a dozen people ages 18 to 43.

A 32-year-old who always thought she would have children can no longer justify it to herself. A Mormon has bucked the expectations of her religion by resolving to adopt rather than give birth. An Ohio woman had her first child after an unplanned pregnancy — and then had a second because she did not want her daughter to face an environmental collapse alone.

Continue reading...

Youth Voices Will Be Heard

On February 14th, 2018, the nation witnessed one of the deadliest shootings in modern US history at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. This event was the eighth school shooting resulting in casualties that has occured in this year alone.

The students who witnessed the deaths of their 17 classmates are not going to stand by while these tragedies continue to occur. The rise of the #NeverAgain movement seeks to change, once and for all, the gun laws in our country that make it far too easy for guns to make their way into the wrong hands.

Continue reading...

Study Finds BPA in 86% of Teenagers

BPA in teens

A recent study from the University of Exeter has found traces of bisphenol A (BPA) in 86 percent of teenagers. This is concerning, since BPA is a known hormone-disrupting chemical that imitates female sex hormones and has been linked to breast and prostate cancers, as well as low sperm counts and sperm disfigurements in men.

Despite its bad reputation, BPA continues to be used in many plastic containers, water bottles, food cans, dental floss, and heat-resistant papers, which means that humans come into contact with it frequently.

This particular study set out to see if it was possible to reduce one’s BPA level by altering dietary choices. It was designed to be a ‘real-world setting’, unlike prior studies that have focused on families and related individuals, who likely share sources of BPA, and participated in strict dietary interventions that are not realistically sustainable.

Continue reading...

Let Them Lead: Millennial Women Are Ready To Blaze A New Trail

Young women

In early 2016, I set out on a mission: to travel the United States and learn as much as I could about the professional experiences of millennial women in the American workforce. All around me I saw talented, intelligent, hard-working millennial women being held down by the chains of sexism, ageism, and racism at work – and I wanted to do something about it.

I began by scouring all the available data I could find about the millennial generation, both in the U.S. and globally. While the studies produced by Deloitte, PwC, McKinsey, and other large firms were immensely helpful, they were also impersonally “macro.” All lacked the texture of individual voices and stories.  To understand the challenges millennial women face on a deeper level, I knew I needed to focus on the micro, textured stories of millennial women across the country that would give me both qualitative and quantitative data. I crafted a survey and interview questions and set up events in as many cities as I could, starting with Los Angeles and ending in New York City. Inspired by my peers, I decided to call this project The Brave Millennial.

Continue reading...

Rachel Carson, an Environmental Hero

Rachel Carson Environmental Defense Fund

Rachel Carson knew she would be criticized for connecting pesticides to the death of songbirds when Silent Spring was published in 1962. As a scientist, though, she didn’t expect to be vilified by an entire industry, or to be called an alarmist and Communist.

Despite the attacks, she had the courage to keep going, all the way to the White House where she met with President John F. Kennedy’s Science Advisory Committee, and to Capitol Hill where she testified before senators.

That determination is what ultimately made Carson the most significant American environmentalist of the past century, and why she’s been an inspiration to me since I was a teenager.

Carson opened our eyes to the harm we were doing to the environment, ultimately making our nation a better steward of our natural heritage. Everyone in the environmental community follows in her footsteps.

Continue reading...

High School Girls Invent Solar-Powered Tent For Homeless Community

DIY Girls Tent for Homeless

DIY Girls was founded in 2011 by Luz Rivas, an MIT graduate, engineer, and educator who wanted to empower girls to pursue careers in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) fields. The daughter of Mexican immigrants, Rivas focused her efforts specifically on helping girls from low-income backgrounds, whom she knew might not otherwise receive the encouragement needed to pursue STEM. Indeed, according to the National Science Board, women make up only 29 percent of the science and engineering workforce. Of that 29 percent, only 6 percent are Hispanic or Latina. 
As Brittany Levine Beckman reports for Mashable, DIY Girls hopes to change that. Today, the nonprofit recruits at schools around the United States. They search for girls who are eager to solve personal, school-wide, and community-wide problems, and help them learn the STEM skills necessary to do so. 
When DIY Girls executive director Evelyn Gomez began recruiting at her alma mater, San Fernando High School, she quickly met several such girls. They shared a common concern: the rising rate of homelessness in their neighborhoods. As of 2016, San Fernando valley’s rate of homelessness had increased 36 percent, to include around 7,094 people. The girls noticed more people living on the streets, and they wanted to help, but they were unsure how. 

Continue reading...

The Queen Of England Banned Plastic Straws And Bottles From Her Estates

Queen of England bans plastic

In 2017, the BBC produced a series called Blue Planet II, led by environmentalist and celebrated documentarian, David Attenborough. The show invited land-dwellers into the depths, to meet the strange and fascinating creatures who live there. But it also showed the devastating effects our plastic use is having on marine life. 

Business Insider reports that someone posed to make a big difference in the United Kingdom was also watching: Queen Elizabeth. The Queen has long been a fan of Attenborough’s work, and she was also moved by this project. Buckingham Palace just announced some sweeping changes to be made on the royal estates at her directive.

“Across the organization, the royal household is committed to reducing its environmental impact,” said a spokesman for Buckingham Palace. “As part of that, we have taken a number of practical steps to cut back on the use of plastics. At all levels, there’s a strong desire to tackle this issue.”

Continue reading...

How Healthy is Your Yogurt?

Is yogurt healthy?

Yogurt has been around for decades, but with the advent of trendy new yogurts like Greek yogurt and skyr, the food has recently returned to the spotlight. It’s touted as a healthy snack that promises everything from a flatter stomach to better digestion. But just how healthy is yogurt, really?

With dozens and dozens of varieties to try — some of which contain as many ingredients — it’s hard to sort out the healthy and the not-so-healthy. Here are four things to keep in mind when choosing your yogurt.

Continue reading...