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Browse curated homeschool resources from the community

3 Secrets of Resilient People Lucy Hone
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3 Secrets of Resilient People Lucy Hone

Everyone experiences loss, but how do you cope with the tough moments that follow? Resilience researcher Lucy Hone shares three hard-won strategies for developing the capacity to brave adversity, overcome struggle and face whatever may come head-on with fortitude and grace.

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Three Months After by Cristin O Keefe Aptowicz
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Three Months After by Cristin O Keefe Aptowicz

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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The Myth of Gawain and the Green Knight Dan Kwartler
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The Myth of Gawain and the Green Knight Dan Kwartler

It was Christmas in Camelot and King Arthur was throwing a party. In the midst of the revelry, a towering knight proposed a game. He challenged the warriors present to attack him with his own axe. If they could strike him down, they would win his powerful weapon. However, he would be allowed to return the blow in one year. Dan Kwartler details the myth of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight.

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Licking Bees and Pulping Trees the Reign of a Wasp Queen Kenny Coogan
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Licking Bees and Pulping Trees the Reign of a Wasp Queen Kenny Coogan

As the sun rises, something royal stirs inside a pile of firewood. It's the wasp queen; one of thousands who mated in late autumn and hibernated through the winter. Now she must emerge into the spring air to begin her reign. This queen is the lone survivor of her old hive, and now, she must become the foundress of a new one. Kenny Coogan details a year in the life of a wasp queen.

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The Technology That Changed the World Twice Daniel Sperling and Gil Tal
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The Technology That Changed the World Twice Daniel Sperling and Gil Tal

By the end of the 19th century, nearly 40% of American cars were electric. But these vehicles had a few major problems — early car batteries were expensive and inefficient, and the vehicles were twice the price of a gas-powered car. And so for the next several decades, gas-powered cars dominated the market. Can electric cars reclaim their place on the road? Daniel Sperling and Gil Tal investigate.

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How to Stop Languishing and Start Finding Flow Adam Grant
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How to Stop Languishing and Start Finding Flow Adam Grant

Have you found yourself staying up late, joylessly bingeing TV shows and doomscrolling through the news, or simply navigating your day uninspired and aimless? Chances are you're languishing, says organizational psychologist Adam Grant. He breaks down the key indicators of languishing and presents three ways to escape that "meh" feeling and start finding your flow.

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Can You Solve the Feeding Frenzy Riddle Henri Picciotto
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Can You Solve the Feeding Frenzy Riddle Henri Picciotto

As Numberland’s best detective, you thought you’d seen it all. But the desiccated corpses of prominent natural numbers have been showing up all over the city. A lockdown is ordered from sundown to sunrise, and it’s still not enough to stop what can only be described as a vampiric feeding frenzy. Can you figure out why the citizens of Numberland are being attacked? Henri Picciotto shows how.

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khanacademy.org
The True Cost of Gold Lyla Latif
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The True Cost of Gold Lyla Latif

In 2020, Mali produced over 71 tons of gold— an amount worth billions of dollars. But Mali saw only $850 million dollars from that gold. And this situation isn’t unique: a number of other gold-rich countries in Africa aren’t seeing the income they should given the price of gold. So, what’s going on? Lyla Latif digs into how foreign corporations exploit African nations for their resources.

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How Turtle Shells Evolved Twice Judy Cebra Thomas
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How Turtle Shells Evolved Twice Judy Cebra Thomas

Modern turtle shells are almost as diverse as the turtles themselves. Sea turtles have flatter, lighter shells for gliding through the water. Land-dwelling tortoises have domed shells that can slip free of predators’ jaws. Leatherback turtles have shells without the ring of bone around the edge. So how did the shell evolve? Judy Cebra-Thomas explores the ancestry of the turtle.

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What Machiavellian Really Means Pazit Cahlon and Alex Gendler
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What Machiavellian Really Means Pazit Cahlon and Alex Gendler

From Shakespeare’s plays to modern TV dramas, the unscrupulous schemer for whom the ends always justify the means has become a familiar character type we love to hate. For centuries, we’ve had a single word to describe such characters: Machiavellian. But is it possible that we’ve been using that word wrong this whole time? Pazit Cahlon and Alex Gendler investigate the origins of the term.

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khanacademy.org
khanacademy.org
khanacademy.org
The True Story Behind the Legend of the 47 Ronin Adam Clulow
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The True Story Behind the Legend of the 47 Ronin Adam Clulow

Asano Naganori, lord of Akō domain, fixed his gaze on Kira Yoshinaka, a senior master of ceremony. Asano extended his short sword, charged through the castle, and struck Kira. While the wound wasn’t fatal, its consequences would be. What brought about this violent quarrel? And what would come of Asano and his samurai? Adam Clulow shares the legend of the 47 Rōnin and their quest for revenge.

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How Boredom Can Lead to Your Most Brilliant Ideas Manoush Zomorodi
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How Boredom Can Lead to Your Most Brilliant Ideas Manoush Zomorodi

Do you sometimes have your most creative ideas while folding laundry, washing dishes or doing nothing in particular? It's because when your body goes on autopilot, your brain gets busy forming new neural connections that connect ideas and solve problems. Manoush Zomorodi explains the connection between spacing out and creativity. Disclaimer: This video contains a curse word which may be unsuitable for younger audiences.

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How Did Apartheid Happen and How Did it Finally End Thula Simpson
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How Did Apartheid Happen and How Did it Finally End Thula Simpson

For 46 years, South Africans lived under Apartheid, a strict policy of segregation that barred the country’s Black majority from skilled, high-paying jobs, quality education, voting, and much more. So, how did these laws come to be? And how did this era of institutionalized discrimination finally come to an end? Thula Simpson explores how colonization led to the national trauma of Apartheid.

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What Almost Dying Taught Me About Living Suleika Jaouad
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What Almost Dying Taught Me About Living Suleika Jaouad

"The hardest part of my cancer experience began once the cancer was gone," says author Suleika Jaouad. In this fierce, funny, wisdom-packed talk, she challenges us to think beyond the divide between "sick" and "well," asking: How do you begin again and find meaning after life is interrupted?

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khanacademy.org
khanacademy.org