Lessons in Herstory

Lessons in Herstory icon

Lessons in Herstory

Goodby, Silverstein & Partners, Inc.

4.1

104 ratings

Free

In this educational app, you can scan portraits in textbooks to reveal stories about women from history. Includes AR features, story library, and compatibility with specific textbooks.

AppRecs review analysis

AppRecs rating 4.0. Trustworthiness 79 out of 100. Review manipulation risk 20 out of 100. Based on a review sample analyzed.

★★★★

4.0

AppRecs Rating

Ratings breakdown

5 star

62%

4 star

17%

3 star

5%

2 star

5%

1 star

12%

What to know

Low review manipulation risk

20% review manipulation risk

Credible reviews

79% trustworthiness score from analyzed reviews

High user satisfaction

79% of sampled ratings are 4+ stars (4.1★ average)

About Lessons in Herstory

Lessons in Herstory uses AR to bring to life forgotten stories of women, right on the pages of your history textbook. Scan any portrait of a man in your textbook and unlock a related story about an important woman.

Currently, Lessons In Herstory works with “A History of US: Liberty for All? 1820-1860, Book Five, 2005”. The app will soon expand to work with more textbooks. But don’t worry if you don’t have a textbook, you can still use the app with the photos available on www.lessonsinherstory.com

By putting a new lens on history, this app has the power to inspire the next generation through stories of powerful women.
Lessons in Herstory Screenshots
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Reviews for Lessons in Herstory

dedesonntag

Clara Barton is Missing

I can’t thank you enough for creating something so important. And the graphics make it so approachable and fun! The only thing I would point out is that Clara Barton is missing. She used her own money during civil war to bring medical supplies to the wounded soldiers at the frontline, wrote letters to their families so they could have closure, and fought for 10 years to establish the American Red Cross. She more than deserves to be shown next to Abraham Lincoln and all other important civil war heroes.

sweatyy palms

For white and black people only

No Asian representation. Basically just reinforces that stereotype that white and black women are the ones making change for female empowerment and freedom.

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