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Browse curated homeschool resources from the community

How sugar affects the brain - Nicole Avena
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How sugar affects the brain - Nicole Avena

Understanding sugar's impact on your brain chemistry.

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TED-Ed: DNA: The Book of You
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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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TED-Ed: How Mendel's Pea Plants Helped Us Understand Genetics
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TED-Ed: How Mendel's Pea Plants Helped Us Understand Genetics

Each father and mother pass down traits to their children, who inherit combinations of their dominant or recessive alleles. But how do we know so much about genetics today? Hortensia Jiménez Díaz explains how studying pea plants revealed why you may have blue eyes.

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TED-Ed: What Can DNA Tests Tell Us About Our Ancestry?
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TED-Ed: What Can DNA Tests Tell Us About Our Ancestry?

Two sisters take the same DNA test. The results show that one sister is 10% French, the other 0%. Both sisters share the same two parents, and therefore the same set of ancestors. So how can one be 10% more French than the other? Tests like these rely on our DNA to answer questions about our ancestry, but DNA actually can’t tell us everything. Prosanta Chakrabarty explores the accuracy of DNA tests.

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The science of skin color - Angela Koine Flynn
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The science of skin color - Angela Koine Flynn

Discover the biology behind human skin color variation.

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Cell vs. virus: A battle for health - Shannon Stiles
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Cell vs. virus: A battle for health - Shannon Stiles

Watch the epic battle between your cells and invading viruses.

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TED-Ed: How Do Your Hormones Work?
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TED-Ed: How Do Your Hormones Work?

Over our lifetimes, our bodies undergo a series of extraordinary metamorphoses: we grow, experience puberty, and many of us reproduce. Behind the scenes, the endocrine system works constantly to orchestrate these changes. Emma Bryce explains how this system regulates everything from your sleep to the rhythm of your beating heart, exerting its influence over each and every one of your cells.

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TED-Ed: Can You Solve the Frog Riddle?
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TED-Ed: Can You Solve the Frog Riddle?

You’re stranded in a rainforest, and you’ve eaten a poisonous mushroom. To save your life, you need an antidote excreted by a certain species of frog. Unfortunately, only the female frog produces the antidote. The male and female look identical, but the male frog has a distinctive croak. Derek Abbott shows how to use conditional probability to make sure you lick the right frog and get out alive.

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Tracking grizzly bears from space - David Laskin
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Tracking grizzly bears from space - David Laskin

How satellites help scientists study wildlife.

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Could we survive prolonged space travel? - Lisa Nip
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Could we survive prolonged space travel? - Lisa Nip

The biological challenges of long-distance space exploration.

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TED-Ed: What Does the Liver Do?
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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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TED-Ed: How CRISPR Lets You Edit DNA
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TED-Ed: How CRISPR Lets You Edit DNA

From the smallest single-celled organism to the largest creatures on Earth, every living thing is defined by its genes. With recent advancements, scientists can change an organism’s fundamental features in record time using gene editing tools such as CRISPR. But where did this medical marvel come from and how does it work? Andrea M. Henle examines the science behind this new technology.

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TED-Ed: Why Is Biodiversity So Important?
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TED-Ed: Why Is Biodiversity So Important?

Our planet’s diverse, thriving ecosystems may seem like permanent fixtures, but they’re actually vulnerable to collapse. Jungles can become deserts, and reefs can become lifeless rocks. What makes one ecosystem strong and another weak in the face of change? Kim Preshoff details why the answer, to a large extent, is biodiversity.

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TED-Ed: Why Our Muscles Get Tired
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TED-Ed: Why Our Muscles Get Tired

You're lifting weights. The first time feels easy, but each lift takes more and more effort until you can’t continue. Inside your arms, the muscles responsible for the lifting have become unable to contract. What’s going on? Christian Moro explains how exactly our muscles operate, and what causes them to become fatigued.

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The evolution of the book - Julie Dreyfuss
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The evolution of the book - Julie Dreyfuss

From clay tablets to e-readers.

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TED-Ed: How Do We Study Living Brains?
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TED-Ed: How Do We Study Living Brains?

As far as we know, there’s only one thing in our solar system sophisticated enough to study itself: the human brain. But this self-investigation is challenging because a living brain is shielded by skull, swaddled in tissue, and made up of billions of tiny cells. How do we study living brains without harming their owners? Elizabeth Waters and John Borghi explain how EEGs, fMRIs, and PETs work.

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TED-Ed: How Stretching Actually Changes Your Muscles
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TED-Ed: How Stretching Actually Changes Your Muscles

An athlete is preparing for a game. They’ve put on their gear and done their warmup, and now it’s time for one more routine — stretching. Typically, athletes stretch before physical activity to avoid injuries like strains and tears. But does stretching actually prevent these issues? And if so, how long do the benefits of stretching last? Malachy McHugh explores the finer points of flexibility.

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TED-Ed: Can You Solve the Virus Riddle?
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TED-Ed: Can You Solve the Virus Riddle?

Your research team has found a prehistoric virus preserved in the permafrost and isolated it for study. After a late night working, you’re just closing up the lab when a sudden earthquake hits and breaks all the sample vials. Will you be able to destroy the virus before the vents open and unleash a deadly airborne plague? Lisa Winer shows how.

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TED-Ed: The Genes You Don't Get from Your Parents
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TED-Ed: The Genes You Don't Get from Your Parents

Inside our cells, each of us has a second set of genes completely separate from our 23 pairs of chromosomes. And this isn’t just true for humans— it’s true of every animal, plant, and fungus on Earth. This second genome belongs to our mitochondria, an organelle inside our cells. So why are they so different from anything else in our bodies? Devin Shuman explores the purpose of mitochondrial DNA.

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TED-Ed: How Blood Pressure Works
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TED-Ed: How Blood Pressure Works

If you lined up all the blood vessels in your body, they’d be 60 thousand miles long. And every day, they carry the equivalent of over two thousand gallons of blood to the body’s tissues. What effect does this pressure have on the walls of the blood vessels? Wilfred Manzano gives the facts on blood pressure.

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TED-Ed: How Your Digestive System Works
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TED-Ed: How Your Digestive System Works

Constantly churning inside of you, the digestive system performs a daily marvel: it transforms your food into the vital nutrients that sustain your body and ensure your survival. Emma Bryce traces food’s nine-meter-long, 40-hour journey through the remarkable digestive tract.

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TED-Ed: The Myth of Oisín and the Land of Eternal Youth
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TED-Ed: The Myth of Oisín and the Land of Eternal Youth

In a typical hero’s journey, the protagonist sets out on an adventure, undergoes great change and returns in triumph to their point of origin. But in the Irish genre of myth known as echtraí, the journey to the otherworld ends in a point of no return. Iseult Gillespie shares the myth of Oisín and the land of eternal youth.

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TED-Ed: The Evolution of the Human Eye
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TED-Ed: The Evolution of the Human Eye

The human eye is an amazing mechanism, able to detect anywhere from a few photons to a few quadrillion, or switch focus from the screen in front of you to the distant horizon in a third of a second. How did these complex structures evolve? Joshua Harvey details the 500 million year story of the human eye.

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TED-Ed: The Chinese Myth of the White Snake
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TED-Ed: The Chinese Myth of the White Snake

The talented herbalist Xu Xian had just started his own medicine shop where he created remedies with the help of his wife, Bai Su Zhen. One day a monk named Fa Hai approached him, warning him that there was a demon in his house. The demon, he said, was Bai Su Zhen. Xu Xian laughed. How could his kind-hearted wife be a demon? Shunan Teng traces the tale of the immortal white snake.

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