Discover Resources

Browse curated homeschool resources from the community

A Day in the Life of a Servant in Edwardian England Stephanie Honchell Smith
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A Day in the Life of a Servant in Edwardian England Stephanie Honchell Smith

It’s just before dawn in 1906 at Wroxton Abbey, and 16-year-old Alice Sutton’s mind is already spinning. The underhousemaid has a full day ahead of her as the estate prepares for the evening’s guest: Prince Arthur. This is Alice’s chance to prove herself to her new employers — but there are other forces at play. Stephanie Honchell Smith details a day in the life of a servant in Edwardian England.

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Richard St John the Power of Passion
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Richard St John the Power of Passion

For love or money? Based on hundreds of interviews and his personal experience, Richard St. John suggests that passion, not money, is one of the key drivers of success.

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Michael Evans What is Chirality and How Did it Get in My Molecules
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Michael Evans What is Chirality and How Did it Get in My Molecules

Improve your understanding of molecular properties with this lesson on the fascinating property of chirality. Your hands are the secret to understanding the strange similarity between two molecules that look almost exactly alike, but are not perfect mirror images.

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Why Are Airplanes Slower Than They Used to Be Alex Gendler
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Why Are Airplanes Slower Than They Used to Be Alex Gendler

In 1996, a British Airways plane flew from New York to London in a record-breaking two hours and fifty-three minutes. Today, however, passengers flying the same route can expect to spend no less than six hours in the air — twice as long. So why, in a world where everything seems to be getting faster, have commercial flights lagged behind? Alex Gendler details the problems facing supersonic flight.

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Making a Ted Ed Lesson Animating Zombies with Puppets
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Making a Ted Ed Lesson Animating Zombies with Puppets

What style of animation perfectly mimics the movement of zombies? Puppet animation allows for just the right amount of zombie-like stiff limbs and jerky stumbles. TED-Ed animators show how to bring a zombie to life through 2D puppet animation (and how to try this at home).

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How Smart Are Orangutans Lu Gao
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How Smart Are Orangutans Lu Gao

Along with humans, orangutans belong to the Hominidae family tree, which stretches back 14 million years. But it’s not just their striking red hair that makes orangutans unique among our great ape cousins. Lu Gao shares some amazing facts about these incredibly intelligent great apes from Asia.

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Animation Basics Homemade Special Effects Ted Ed
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Animation Basics Homemade Special Effects Ted Ed

Animation is used everywhere to communicate big ideas--in movies, television, and media. Do you ever stop and wonder about the magic of it all? And have you ever wanted to create your own special effects? TED-Ed animators show just how easy (and fun) homemade special effects can be.

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The Motion of the Ocean the Concentration Gradient Sasha Wright
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The Motion of the Ocean the Concentration Gradient Sasha Wright

The constant motion of our oceans represents a vast and complicated system involving many different drivers. Sasha Wright explains the physics behind one of those drivers -- the concentration gradient -- and illustrates how our oceans are continually engaging in a universal struggle for space.

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What it Takes to Be Racially Literate Priya Vulchi and Winona Guo
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What it Takes to Be Racially Literate Priya Vulchi and Winona Guo

In 2017, Priya Vulchi and Winona Guo traveled to all 50 US states, collecting personal stories about race and intersectionality. Now they're on a mission to equip every American with the tools to understand, navigate and improve a world structured by racial division. They pair personal stories with research to reveal two fundamental gaps in our racial literacy— and how to overcome them.

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How Scientists Are Creating Real Life Invisibility Cloaks Max G Levy
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How Scientists Are Creating Real Life Invisibility Cloaks Max G Levy

A spy presses a button on their suit and blinks out of sight. A wizard wraps himself in a cloak and disappears. A star pilot flicks a switch, and their ship vanishes into space. Invisibility is one of the most tantalizing powers in fiction, spanning all kinds of stories. But could this fantasy ever become a reality? Max G. Levy digs into the technologies that could make invisibility possible.

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Victor Wooten Music as a Language
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Victor Wooten Music as a Language

Music is a powerful communication tool--it causes us to laugh, cry, think and question. Bassist and five-time Grammy winner, Victor Wooten, asks us to approach music the same way we learn verbal language--by embracing mistakes and playing as often as possible.

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A Tap Dancer s Craft Andrew Nemr
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A Tap Dancer s Craft Andrew Nemr

Tap dance, born out of the marriage of African and European dance traditions, went from extremely popular to barely existent to grand revival, all in under a century. Professional tap dancer and TED Fellow Andrew Nemr taps into the history of this truly American art form.

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The Operating System of Life George Zaidan and Charles Morton
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The Operating System of Life George Zaidan and Charles Morton

Humans, octopi and pine trees alike are all made up of cells, tiny but sophisticated systems that keep life going. Cells are almost like tiny factories run by robots, with the nucleus, DNA, proteins, lipids, and vitamins and minerals all playing critical roles. George Zaidan and Charles Morton lay out the blueprint of a cell and explain how biochemistry binds all life together.

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The Secrets of Mozart s Magic Flute Joshua Borths
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The Secrets of Mozart s Magic Flute Joshua Borths

Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s “Die Zauberflöte” (“The Magic Flute”) is widely regarded as one of the most influential operas in history. And while it may seem like a childish fairytale at first glance, it’s actually full of subversive symbolism. Joshua Borths explains how many elements of "The Magic Flute" were inspired by Mozart’s somewhat controversial involvement with Freemasonry.

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The Secrets to Writing the Perfect Pop Song Think Like a Musician
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The Secrets to Writing the Perfect Pop Song Think Like a Musician

"Think Like A Musician" connects you with working musicians who want to help the music-curious and music-passionate hone and share the gift of music with the world. Part interview, part animated course, our second season "Think Like A Songwriter" features artists sharing their insight on the ins and outs of fine-tuning your songwriting and crafting timeless, memorable music.

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How to Build a Fictional World Kate Messner
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How to Build a Fictional World Kate Messner

Why is J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings trilogy so compelling? How about The Matrix or Harry Potter? What makes these disparate worlds come alive are clear, consistent rules for how people, societies -- and even the laws of physics -- function in these fictional universes. Author Kate Messner offers a few tricks for you, too, to create a world worth exploring in your own words.

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How Porn Changes the Way Teens Think About Sex Emily F Rothman
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How Porn Changes the Way Teens Think About Sex Emily F Rothman

"The free, online, mainstream pornography that teenagers are most likely to see is a completely terrible form of sex education," says public health researcher Emily Rothman. She shares how her mission to end dating and sexual violence led her to create a pornography literacy program that helps teens learn about consent and respect— and invites us to think critically about sexually explicit media.

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Why Do Cats Have Vertical Pupils Emma Bryce
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Why Do Cats Have Vertical Pupils Emma Bryce

Peering into the eyes of different animals, you’ll see some extraordinarily shaped pupils. House cats, for one, are twilight hunters with vertically elongated pupils. Many grazing animals, like goats, have rectangular pupils. Other animals have crescent- or heart-shaped pupils. So, what’s going on? Why are there so many different pupil shapes? Emma Bryce digs into the science of animal vision.

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Illuminating Photography Eva Timothy
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Illuminating Photography Eva Timothy

The origins of the cameras we use today were invented in the 19th century. Or were they? A millenia before, Arab scientist Alhazen was using the camera obscura to duplicate images, with Leonardo da Vinci following suit 500 years later and major innovations beginning in the 19th century. Eva Timothy tracks the trajectory from the most rudimentary cameras to the ubiquity of them today.

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How Art Can Help You Analyze Amy E Herman
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How Art Can Help You Analyze Amy E Herman

Can art save lives? Not exactly, but our most prized professionals (doctors, nurses, police officers) can learn real world skills through art analysis. Studying art like René Magritte’s Time Transfixed can enhance communication and analytical skills, with an emphasis on both the seen and unseen. Amy E. Herman explains why art historical training can prepare you for real world investigation.

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Who Decides What Art Means Hayley Levitt
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Who Decides What Art Means Hayley Levitt

There is a question that has been tossed around by philosophers and art critics for decades: how much should an artist's intention affect your interpretation of the work? Do the artist’s plans and motivations affect its meaning? Or is it completely up to the judgment of the viewer? Hayley Levitt explores the complex web of artistic interpretation.

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How Comic Books Can Help You Learn Gene Luen Yang
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How Comic Books Can Help You Learn Gene Luen Yang

In the 1940s, comic books became a mass medium, with millions of copies selling every month. Teachers even began experimenting by bringing comics into their classrooms. So, can comic books and graphic novels really help you learn? Gene Luen Yang explores the history of comics in American education, and reveals some unexpected insights about their potential for helping kids learn.

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An Ode to Envy Parul Sehgal
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An Ode to Envy Parul Sehgal

What is jealousy? What drives it, and why do we secretly love it? No study has ever been able to capture its "loneliness, longevity, grim thrill" -- that is, says Parul Sehgal, except for fiction. In an eloquent meditation, she scours pages from literature to show how jealousy is not so different from a quest for knowledge.

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The Original Ring of Power Alex Gendler
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The Original Ring of Power Alex Gendler

More than 2,000 years ago, the Greek philosopher Plato recounted the legend of the Ring of Gyges in “Republic.” The story of the ring surfaces as the philosopher, Socrates, and his student discuss why people act justly: is it because it’s what’s right? Or because it’s a convention that’s enforced through punishment and reward? Alex Gendler shares the allegory of the ill-gotten, magical ring.

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