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Browse curated homeschool resources from the community

The True Story of Sacajawea Karen Mensing
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The True Story of Sacajawea Karen Mensing

In the early 19th century, a young Agaidika teenager named Sacajawea was enlisted by explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to aid her husband Toussaint Charbonneau as a guide to the Western United States. Karen Mensing debunks some of the myths that surround the familiar image of the heroic woman with a baby strapped to her back and a vast knowledge of the American wilderness.

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Why should you read Edgar Allan Poe? - Scott Peeples
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Why should you read Edgar Allan Poe? - Scott Peeples

The genius behind gothic horror and detective fiction.

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TED-Ed: Linguistics Lessons
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TED-Ed: Linguistics Lessons

TED-Ed celebrates the ideas of teachers and students around the world. Discover hundreds of animated lessons, create customized lessons, and share your big ideas.

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Why Should You Read Charles Dickens Iseult Gillespie
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Why Should You Read Charles Dickens Iseult Gillespie

The starving orphan seeking a second helping of gruel. The spinster wasting away in her tattered wedding dress. The stone-hearted miser plagued by the ghost of Christmas past. More than a century after his death, these remain recognizable figures from the work of Charles Dickens. But what are the features of Dickens’ writing that make it so special? Iseult Gillespie investigates.

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The Emergence of Drama as a Literary Art Mindy Ploeckelmann
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The Emergence of Drama as a Literary Art Mindy Ploeckelmann

When presented with the problem of hoards of illiterate commoners, English clergymen in the 11th century created plays to spread word about the Bible. Eventually, the plays moved out of the church and into the streets. Mindy Ploeckelmann tracks the development of English drama from mystery plays to morality plays and, eventually, to Shakespeare.

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Why Should You Read Midnight s Children Isuelt Gillespie
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Why Should You Read Midnight s Children Isuelt Gillespie

It begins with a countdown. A woman goes into labor as the clock ticks towards midnight. Across India, people wait for the declaration of independence after nearly 200 years of British rule. At the stroke of midnight, an infant and two new nations are born in perfect synchronicity. These events form the foundation of “Midnight’s Children.” Iseult Gillespie explores Salman Rushdie’s dazzling novel.

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What s the Fastest Way to Alphabetize Your Bookshelf Chand John
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What s the Fastest Way to Alphabetize Your Bookshelf Chand John

You work at the college library. You’re in the middle of a quiet afternoon when suddenly, a shipment of 1,280 books arrives. The books are in a straight line, but they're all out of order, and the automatic sorting system is broken. How can you sort the books quickly? Chand John shows how, shedding light on how algorithms help librarians and search engines speedily sort information.

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Everything You Need to Know to Read the Canterbury Tales Iseult Gillespie
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Everything You Need to Know to Read the Canterbury Tales Iseult Gillespie

A portly Miller, barely able to sit on his horse, rambles on about the flighty wife of a crotchety old carpenter and the scholar she takes as her lover. This might sound like a bawdy joke, but it’s part of one of the most esteemed works of English literature ever created: The Canterbury Tales. Iseult Gillespie shares everything you need to know to read Geoffrey Chaucer’s classic collection.

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Everything You Need to Know to Read Mary Shelley s Frankenstein Iseult Gillespie
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Everything You Need to Know to Read Mary Shelley s Frankenstein Iseult Gillespie

In 1815, Lord Byron proposed a challenge to a few literary guests he had gathered in his house on Lake Geneva: Who could write the most chilling ghost story? This question sparked an idea in eighteen-year-old Mary Shelley who, over the next few months, crafted the story of “Frankenstein.” Iseult Gillespie shares everything you need to know to read Mary Shelley’s classic novel.

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Why Should You Read Waiting for Godot Iseult Gillespie
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Why Should You Read Waiting for Godot Iseult Gillespie

Two men, Estragon and Vladimir, meet by a tree at dusk to wait for someone named “Godot.” So begins a vexing cycle where the two debate when Godot will come, why they’re waiting and whether they’re even at the right tree. The play offers a simple but stirring question- what should the characters do? Iseult Gillespie shares everything you need to know to read the tragicomedy.

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TED-Ed: Media & Journalism Lessons
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TED-Ed: Media & Journalism Lessons

TED-Ed celebrates the ideas of teachers and students around the world. Discover hundreds of animated lessons, create customized lessons, and share your big ideas.

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How to Write the Perfect Crime According to Agatha Christie Jamie Bernthal
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How to Write the Perfect Crime According to Agatha Christie Jamie Bernthal

With almost 100 mystery novels, each one a cleverly constructed puzzle box of clues, misdirection, and human drama, Agatha Christie is the best-selling novelist of all time. Her eccentric detectives, clever clues, and simplified suspects have stumped countless readers over the last century. So, how did she craft these perfect crimes? Jamie Bernthal dissects the writing of Agatha Christie.

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How to Write Fiction That Comes Alive Nalo Hopkinson
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How to Write Fiction That Comes Alive Nalo Hopkinson

The point of fiction is to cast a spell, a momentary illusion that you are living in the world of the story. But as a writer, how do you suck your readers into your stories in this way? Nalo Hopkinson shares some tips for how to use language to make your fiction really come alive.

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The Deadly Irony of Gunpowder Eric Rosado
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The Deadly Irony of Gunpowder Eric Rosado

In the mid-ninth century, Chinese chemists, hard at work on an immortality potion, instead invented gunpowder. They soon found that this highly inflammable powder was far from an elixir of life -- they put it to use in bombs against Mongol invaders, and the rest was history. Eric Rosado details how gunpowder has caused devastation around the world, despite the incandescent beauty of fireworks.

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Why Should You Read Shakespeare s the Tempest Iseult Gillespie
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Why Should You Read Shakespeare s the Tempest Iseult Gillespie

Claps of thunder and flashes of lightning illuminate a swelling sea, as a ship buckles beneath the waves. It is no ordinary storm, but a violent and vengeful tempest, and it sets the stage for Shakespeare’s most enigmatic play. Why does this play still resonate with modern readers? Iseult Gillespie investigates.

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Weaving Narratives in Museum Galleries Thomas P Campbell 2
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Weaving Narratives in Museum Galleries Thomas P Campbell 2

As the director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, Thomas P. Campbell thinks deeply about curating—not just selecting art objects, but placing them in a setting where the public can learn their stories. With glorious images, he shows how his curation philosophy works for displaying medieval tapestries—and for the over-the-top fashion/art of Alexander McQueen. (From The Design Studio session at TED2012, guest-curated by Chee Pearlman and David Rockwell.)

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We Can Help You Master Public Speaking Chris Anderson
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We Can Help You Master Public Speaking Chris Anderson

Storytelling is an ancient art; as humans developed language and culture, we learned to share our stories, thoughts, and dreams. And that storytelling evolved into public speaking, and our audience— thanks to the internet— is the whole world, not just a campfire. So how can we make our voices heard in such a busy space? Chris Anderson digs into why presentation literacy is the skill of the future.

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Why Should You Read James Joyce s Ulysses Sam Slote
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Why Should You Read James Joyce s Ulysses Sam Slote

James Joyce's “Ulysses” is widely considered to be both a literary masterpiece and one of the hardest works of literature to read. It inspires such devotion that once a year, thousands of people all over the world dress up like the characters, take to the streets, and read the book aloud. So what is it about this novel that inspires so many people? Sam Slote uncovers the allure of this epic tome.

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When to Use Apostrophes Laura Mcclure
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When to Use Apostrophes Laura Mcclure

It’s possessive. It’s often followed by S’s. And it’s sometimes tricky when it comes to its usage. It’s the apostrophe. Laura McClure gives a refresher on when to use apostrophes in writing.

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All the World s a Stage by William Shakespeare
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All the World s a Stage by William Shakespeare

This animation is part of our series, "There's a Poem for That," which features animated interpretations of poems both old and new that give language to some of life's biggest feelings. Check out the full series here: http://bit.ly/TEDEdTheresAPoemForThat

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Why Should You Read Toni Morrison s Beloved Yen Pham
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Why Should You Read Toni Morrison s Beloved Yen Pham

Two tiny handprints stamped into a cake. A mirror that shatters without warning. A trail of cracker crumbs strewn along the floor. Everyone at 124 Bluestone Road knows their home is haunted— but there’s no mystery about the spirit tormenting them. So begins “Beloved,” Toni Morrison’s Pulitzer Prize-winning drama. Yen Pham digs into the novel's exploration of the dehumanizing effects of slavery.

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Why Should You Read Kurt Vonnegut Mia Nacamulli
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Why Should You Read Kurt Vonnegut Mia Nacamulli

Kurt Vonnegut found the tidy, satisfying arcs of many stories at odds with reality, and he set out to explore the ambiguity between good and bad fortune in his own novels. He tried to make sense of human behavior by studying the shapes of stories — ditching straightforward chronologies and clear-cut fortunes. Mia Nacamulli dives into the sometimes dark, yet hopeful works of Vonnegut.

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