Girl Gang Podcast
Text the Girl Gang! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2406256/fan_mail/new] March hits different when you know the backstory. We kick off with how Women’s History Month became official in the US, why it’s tied so closely to International Women’s Day, and why visibility is still a fight even when women make up half the population. Then we widen the lens beyond the usual names and talk about what it means to actually learn women’s history instead of just nodding at it. We get into the women who influenced us most, starting with women in science and the way recognition can get messy. Rosalind Franklin’s work on DNA opens a bigger conversation about stolen credit, gatekeeping, and why women in STEM still need loud advocates and real allies. From there we jump to education and the Montessori method, plus what today’s test-driven schools miss when curiosity and critical thinking get sidelined. The conversation also goes very real on women’s health and why basic reproductive education is still shockingly limited. We talk endometriosis awareness, the power of public voices speaking up, and why learning your own body should never be treated as taboo. Finally, we run through women changing culture right now, from women’s sports and fandom to podcasts, books, and self-help voices like Brené Brown, Glennon Doyle, and Emily Nagoski. If you want Women’s History Month ideas, women in science stories, women’s sports inspiration, and a reading list that actually helps, hit play. Subscribe, share this with a friend, leave a review, and tell us who belongs on your personal list of women who changed your life? Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2406256/support]
31 episodes
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