Instructional Video11:22
PBS

Their Eyes Were Watching God

9th - 12th Standards
Zora Neale Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God is the subject of a Crash Course Literature episode narrated by John Green. Here, Green shares the critical reactions to the novel as well as his own thoughts about its importance.
Instructional Video6:29
PBS

The Catcher in the Rye and First-Person Narrative

6th - 12th Standards
Testimonials for The Catcher in the Rye demonstrate the power of J.D. Salinger's story of a young man who wants to protect innocent children from the phonies in the adult world. Part of the Great American Read series, speakers urge...
Instructional Video5:33
PBS

The Valley of Ashes — The Great Gatsby

9th - 12th Standards
The Valley of Ashes, the billboard advertising Dr. T.J. Eckleburg, and Wilson's garage are haunting symbols that F. Scott Fitzgerald uses to bring into focus the dark side of the American Dream. A resource from the PBS American Masters...
Instructional Video3:02
PBS

A Separate Peace

8th - 12th Standards
Jenna and Barbara Bush, daughters of former President George W. Bush, and author Armistead Maupin share with viewers their reasons for selecting John Knowles' A Separate Peace as one of their favorite books.
Instructional Video2:33
PBS

Ready Player One

6th - 12th Standards
Ready Player One has been praised as a novel that captures the vitality, the allure, and the essence of the virtual reality experience. Speakers in a short video share their rationale for why Ernest Clines' dystopian novel should be...
Instructional Video3:15
PBS

Catch-22 by Joseph Heller

6th - 12th Standards
Narrators of a short video offer their rationale for why Catch 22 should be included in the Great American Read program. They touch on the key themes in Heller's satirical and sobering novel about Captain John Yossarian and the catch-22s...
Instructional Video0:53
PBS

Joseph Heller's Hilarious Catch-22

9th - 12th Standards
Comedian Seth Meyers shares his rationale for why Catch 22 should get viewers to vote for inclusion of Joseph Heller's satire in the Great American Read program.
Instructional Video2:35
PBS

Heroes and Hope in Frank Herbert's Dune

7th - 12th Standards
Wil Wheaton shares his rationale for why readers should vote for Frank Herbert's Dune as their choice for the Great American Read program. His talk touches on the major themes of the novel and its central conflicts.
Instructional Video4:06
PBS

Dune

6th - 12th Standards
Dune remains one of the most popular science fiction tales ever written. Find out why with a short video that argues for including Frank Herbert's tale of sandworms and Fremen, Mentats and witches, villains and heroes in the Great...
Instructional Video3:07
PBS

The Importance of Chicano Representation in Bless Me, Ultima

9th - 12th Standards
The best books either enable readers to see themselves, their culture, and their way of life reflected in the story or to gain an understanding of a way of life different from their own. Rudolfo Anaya's Bless Me, Ultima is such a book....
Instructional Video3:55
PBS

The Continuing Fight for Tom Robinson and To Kill a Mockingbird

6th - 12th Standards
To Kill a Mockingbird was published in 1960, but its messages remain just as true today as they were in Harper Lee's novel. Learners watch a video that details the story of Anthony Ray Hinton, who was sent to prison for a crime he...
Instructional Video5:06
1
1
PBS

Family and Identity through To Kill a Mockingbird

6th - 12th Standards
How does the Finch family structure set it apart from their community, even before Atticus begins defending Tom Robinson? Watch a video that discusses how Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird establishes a distinctly American world...
Instructional Video2:12
PBS

Chosen Family and The Outsiders

6th - 12th Standards
Can you choose your family after all? The greasers in S.E. Hinton's The Outsiders are as close as family, even though only Pony Boy and his brothers are related. A short video features commentary by hip-hop artist Danny Boy O'Connor...
Instructional Video3:18
PBS

S. E. Hinton, Danny Boy O'Connor, and The Outsiders

7th - 10th Standards
Could your 16-year-old students write a novel? S.E. Hinton did! An engaging video reviews the setting and themes of Hinton's breakout novel The Outsiders through the perspective of hip-hop artist Danny Boy O'Connor, as well as the author...
Instructional Video2:31
PBS

The Call of the Wild

6th - 12th Standards
Jack London's books feature male characters, but that doesn't mean they're just for boys! Chelsea Clinton and Shanna Peeples discuss the underlying messages of love and sacrifice in The Call of the Wild, as well as the conflict of man...
Instructional Video4:13
PBS

Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

6th - 12th Standards
Is the Queen of Hearts a misunderstood monarch or an unchecked tyrant? A video from a series on villainous characters examines how Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland paints the Queen of Hearts as the ultimate...
Instructional Video5:29
Veritasium

First Image of a Black Hole!

9th - 12th Standards
Have scholars ever wondered what a black hole looks like? See the first image of a massive black hole and learn about what a black hole is, how it forms, and how telescopes took images from around the world. The video then relates the...
Instructional Video1:25
1
1
TED-Ed

"Three Months After" by Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz

9th - 12th Standards
What does despair feel like, and what does it look like? Pupils explore the theme of sadness with the sixth episode from the first season of the "There's a Poem for That" playlist. They watch an animated representation of Cristin O'Keefe...
Instructional Video2:35
1
1
TED-Ed

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

9th - 12th Standards
"All the world's a stage, and all the men and women merely players" ... and so begins one of English literature's most quoted plays. Scholars watch a visual interpretation of William Shakespeare's poem "All the World's a Stage" from As...
Instructional Video1:57
1
1
TED-Ed

"The Second Coming" by William Butler Yeats

9th - 12th Standards
War, anarchy, destruction ... William Butler Yeats's poem "The Second Coming" has a little something for everyone! With episode four from season one of the "There's a Poem for That" playlist, scholars watch an animated version of the...
Instructional Video4:45
1
1
TED-Ed

"The Nutritionist" by Andrea Gibson

9th - 12th Standards
How can poems help people express their innermost feelings? With episode three from the first season of the There's a Poem for That playlist, pupils listen to the narrator share about her inner world. As Andrea Gibson reads her poem,...
Instructional Video2:05
1
1
TED-Ed

"To Make Use of Water" by Safia Elhillo

9th - 12th Standards
How can someone manipulate language to describe an essential resource such as water? Pupils consider the question with the second episode from season one of the There's a Poem for That playlist. Learners watch an animated version of the...
Instructional Video2:12
1
1
TED-Ed

"The Road Not Taken" by Robert Frost

9th - 12th Standards
What happens when people take the road less traveled? Scholars explore the topic using the first episode from season one of the There's a Poem for That playlist. Viewers watch an animated adaptation of Robert Frost's classic and...
Instructional Video2:58
PBS

Defying Convention | Little Women

6th - 12th Standards
Jo's decision not to marry her childhood friend Laurie broke the hearts of many readers—but it also represented Little Women's successful break from traditional nineteenth-century gender roles. A short clip illustrates Jo's desire to...