In case you missed it, yesterday was not only International Women's Day, but "A Day Without a Woman," an event organized by the same team behind the Women's March on Washington. In order to support the cause, women wore red, went on strike, and hit the streets to rally.

Michelle Obama, an advocate for girls and women across the globe, visited a Washington, D.C., classroom to talk to 12 female students about the importance of education, People reported. Some of the students are enrolled in the school's international program for immigrant students and hail from Africa and Latin America.

Obama hosted the roundtable talk at Francis L. Cardozo Education Campus, dropping news of the visit on Snapchat yesterday morning. She said, "We’re celebrating International Women’s Day with a group of amazing young women. We’re going to talk about education — the importance of it in their lives and in mine."

The young women appeared excited and shocked when Obama walked into the room, a moment that was also captured on Snapchat. (The girls apparently weren't made aware of the visit ahead of time.) Obama gave out hugs and discussed dreams for the future with the students.

So what's next for the former First Lady? A hotly anticipated book.

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