For centuries, menopause has been cloaked in silence—treated as a footnote in medicine, a punchline in culture, and a full stop in a woman’s perceived relevance. In this provocative and inspiring keynote, Academy Award-winning producer, educator, and Forbes 50 Over 50 honoree Melissa Berton reframes menopause not as an ending, but as a beginning.
Drawing on her work as Executive Director of The Pad Project, Melissa connects the dots between long-standing cultural biases and the lack of education, medical research, and workplace resources for women in midlife. She reframes menopause not as a personal inconvenience, but as a pivotal societal moment—one that demands we shift not just how women see themselves, but how institutions value and uplift them. With history, hope, and humor, she calls on audiences to rewrite the cultural script: from invisibility to visibility, from dismissal to power.
Recently named to Forbes 50 Over 50 list, Dreamers & Doers: Women Making Social Impact, Melissa Berton draws on her experiences as an educator and advocate to share her personal story of how she inspired her high school students to turn their passion for gender equality into a classroom project that became an Oscar winning documentary and a global non-profit. Founded by Melissa and her students, The Pad Project is an organization dedicated to the idea that “a period should end a sentence, not a girl’s education.” In this presentation, Melissa details how she and her students launched a grassroots campaign to fund a sanitary pad-manufacturing machine that would employ ten women in a rural village in India, and to produce a 26-minute documentary to raise awareness about menstrual health. In 2019, that film Period. End of Sentence., was released on Netflix, won the Academy Award for Best Documentary Short, and continues to be seen by millions of viewers around the world. The Pad Project, whose mission is to create and cultivate local and global partnerships to end period stigma and to empower women worldwide, is now an international non-profit with partners in 15 countries — and counting. A believer in collaboration across generations, Melissa vows she will never give up teaching, and takes pride that her former and current students, Millennial and Gen Z activists, are The Pad Project’s leading lights.
Just as the smartest student is not the one with all the answers, but the one who is unafraid to ask the questions; the bravest teacher is not the one who knows the way, but the one who is readiest for discovery. This perspective has driven educator and lifelong girl’s and women’s activist Melissa Berton to band with her students to create an Oscar-winning film and found an international non-profit. When Melissa’s high school students learned that girls their own age were missing school and even dropping out entirely due to the lack of access to products to safely manage their periods, they were outraged and determined to act. Melissa shared their passion. With little experience in fundraising or filmmaking, but with a desire to embolden her students and co-create solutions, Melissa found herself listening more and mentoring differently. Her students became her teachers in the art of learning how to trust; bake sales blossomed into Kickstarter campaigns, and a high school project became an Academy Award winning film, and an international non-profit called The Pad Project. Melissa shares with educators how meeting your students at the starting point, and letting go of the need to lead, powers the best and most enriching journeys.
Melissa Berton, an Executive Director of a global non-profit dedicated to women’s empowerment, an Academy Award-winning producer, and a high school English teacher for over a decade — posits that collaboration is more important than competition, and that the relationships you nurture will take you further than any statement on your resume. Melissa shares how it was only when she cast off the notion that she needed to climb a ladder of credentials to succeed, and instead embraced her emotions and intuition — that is to say, it is only when she “lead like a woman” — that her career took off to unforeseen heights. In her capacity as Executive Director of The Pad Project, Melissa is a world leader in the fight to eradicate period poverty. She is the recipient of the Eleanor Roosevelt Global Women’s Rights Award, and a recent addition to the Forbes 50 Over 50 list, Dreamers & Doers: Women Making Social Impact. Melissa especially appreciates the Forbes designation because women are too often prized for their youth, and society tends to treat middle-aged women as invisible. It is ironic, Berton notes, that when she took the stage to accept the Oscar, held the statue high, and declared “a period should end a sentence, not a girl’s education,” she was on the brink of menopause. Looking back, Berton believes that the years spent menstruating, mothering, and mentoring were themselves a long gestation that gave birth to the woman she is now, in the fifth and most fertile decade of her life.
Stories shape who we become. With over twenty years teaching high school English, Melissa Berton has witnessed the transformative power of literature and diverse narratives to help students discover themselves, develop empathy for others, and learn to navigate uncertainty. Melissa asserts that when young people read about characters whose backgrounds may be radically different from their own, but whose struggles are similar, they not only grow more self-assured and tolerant, but come closer to understanding what it means to be human. More significantly, they learn there is no one answer, but a manifold of possibilities. Melissa’s profound (and often humorous!) accounts of her experiences in the classroom remind us that in this fast-paced age when Gen Z students leap to Google for conclusions, it is more critical than ever that we leave room for them to wonder.
Melissa Berton is a powerful and compassionate speaker for gender equality. She has a great story to tell about working with women, girls, men and boys across the world for human rights, and winning an Academy Award with them in the process. Melissa was our "human rights star" in a weekend of community activism across Connecticut. She speaks so warmly and clearly. People lit up as they listened to her, and were moved, motivated and informed. Melissa has a natural and engaging way with people across society, from students to business people, Senators, and movie stars. It was a joy to work with her and she really helped our cause.
Chair, Oxford Consortium for Human Rights
- Sep 23 2024
Melissa Berton is an absolute powerhouse and an incredibly dynamic speaker! She inspires her audience to take seriously the most fundamental needs of women and girls locally and globally. Melissa is uniquely positioned to discuss both the global dimensions of girls' access to education and women's health & reproductive rights as well as the national and statewide issues we face in the United States. It was wonderful to have Melissa join us at Quinnipiac University and as part of our Oxford Consortium for Human Rights public forum at the Bijou Theater in Bridgeport, Connecticut, where she was able to inspire and mobilize our audience and suggest new avenues for collaboration among the community organizations doing this important work. Melissa is an amazing speaker and an even better person!
Professor of Legal Studies, Quinnipiac University
- Sep 23 2024
The court’s reasoning is anchored in the concept of “substantive equality”. While Article 14 of the Constitution guarantees equality before the law, the court noted that treating everyone exactly the same may perpetuate inequality.
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