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Browse curated homeschool resources from the community

TED-Ed: Making Sense of How Life Fits Together
ed.ted.com

TED-Ed: Making Sense of How Life Fits Together

From something as miniscule as a cell to the biosphere we all call home, living things fit together in numerous interesting ways. Bobbi Seleski catalogs biology from our body and beyond, tracking how unicellular organisms, tissues, organs, organ systems, organisms, populations, communities, ecosystems, and our biosphere build off of each other and work together.

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TED-Ed: A Climate Change Solution Under Our Feet
ed.ted.com

TED-Ed: A Climate Change Solution Under Our Feet

There's two times more carbon in the Earth's soil than in all of its vegetation and the atmosphere — combined. Biogeochemist Asmeret Asefaw Berhe dives into the science of soil and shares how we could use its awesome carbon-trapping power to offset climate change.

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TED-Ed: What Does the Liver Do?
ed.ted.com

TED-Ed: What Does the Liver Do?

There’s a factory inside you that weighs about 1.4 kilograms and runs for 24 hours a day. It’s your liver: the heaviest organ in your body, which simultaneously acts as a storehouse, a manufacturing hub, and a processing plant. Emma Bryce gives a crash course on the liver and how it helps keep us alive.

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How do solar panels work? - Richard Komp
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How do solar panels work? - Richard Komp

Understand the technology that converts sunlight to electricity.

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TED-Ed: The Science of Symmetry
ed.ted.com

TED-Ed: The Science of Symmetry

When you hear the word symmetry, you might think generally of triangles, butterflies, or even ballerinas. But defined scientifically, symmetry is “a transformation that leaves an object unchanged.” Huh? Colm Kelleher unpacks this abstract term and explains how animals' distinct symmetries can tell us more about them -- and ourselves.

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TED-Ed: DNA: The Book of You
ed.ted.com

TED-Ed: DNA: The Book of You

Your body is made of cells -- but how does a single cell know to become part of your nose, instead of your toes? The answer is in your body's instruction book: DNA. Joe Hanson compares DNA to a detailed manual for building a person out of cells -- with 46 chapters (chromosomes) and hundreds of thousands of pages covering every part of you.

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The evolution of the book - Julie Dreyfuss
ed.ted.com

The evolution of the book - Julie Dreyfuss

From clay tablets to e-readers.

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Mysteries of Vernacular Earwig Jessica Oreck and Rachael Teel
ed.ted.com

Mysteries of Vernacular Earwig Jessica Oreck and Rachael Teel

An earwig is neither an ear nor a wig; it is an insect. Jessica Oreck and Rachael Teel explain how folklore gave this bug its name, combining entomology with etymology.

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Can You Outsmart the Fallacy That Fooled a Generation of Doctors Elizabeth Cox
ed.ted.com

Can You Outsmart the Fallacy That Fooled a Generation of Doctors Elizabeth Cox

It’s 1843, and a debate is raging about one of the most common killers of women: childbed fever— no one knows what causes it. One physician has observed patients with inflammation go on to develop childbed fever, and therefore believes the inflammation causes the fever. What's the problem with this argument? Elizabeth Cox explores the false cause fallacy and how to dissect claims with skepticism.

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americanhistory.si.edu
Conserving Our Spectacular Vulnerable Coral Reefs Joshua Drew
ed.ted.com

Conserving Our Spectacular Vulnerable Coral Reefs Joshua Drew

How do coral reef conservationists balance the environmental needs of the reefs with locals who need the reefs to survive? Joshua Drew draws on the islands of Fiji and their exemplary system of protection, called "connectivity," which also keep the needs of fishermen in mind.

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The Myth of the Boiling Frog
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The Myth of the Boiling Frog

Since 1850, global average temperatures have risen by 1 degree Celsius. That may not sound like a lot, but it is. Why? 1 degree is an average. Many places have already gotten much warmer and if average temperatures increase one more degree, the coldest nights in the Arctic might get 10 degrees warmer. So how did we get here? And what can be done? Explore the challenges of net zero emissions.

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khanacademy.org
khanacademy.org
What is Leukemia Danilo Allegra and Dania Puggioni
ed.ted.com

What is Leukemia Danilo Allegra and Dania Puggioni

Stem cells found in the bone marrow are crucial for our health because they are needed to become new blood cells that sustain and protect our bodies. But when the transformation goes wrong, harmful mutations can cause the cells to start replicating without control -- a type of cancer known as leukemia. Danilo Allegra and Dania Puggioni explain how this happens and how certain treatments provide hope for those suffering from the disease.

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khanacademy.org
khanacademy.org
Whats the Best Way to Give a Presentation
ed.ted.com

Whats the Best Way to Give a Presentation

This is episode 4 of the animated series, “Public Speaking 101.” Ideas change everything — and since language lets us share our ideas, learning how to use it well gives speakers the power to inspire people and even change how they think. This 11-episode course will teach you how to identify, develop, and share your best ideas, while mastering essential communication skills along the way.

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