Instructional Video5:52
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: History vs. Thomas Jefferson | Frank Cogliano

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Thomas Jefferson, founding father of the United States and primary author of the Declaration of Independence, was part of America's fight for freedom and equality. But in his personal life, he held over 600 people in slavery. Are his...
Instructional Video8:09
TED Talks

TED: How Black queer culture shaped history | Channing Gerard Joseph

12th - Higher Ed
Names like Bayard Rustin, Frances Thompson and William Dorsey Swann have been largely erased from US history, but they and other Black queer leaders played central roles in monumental movements like emancipation, civil rights and LGBTQ+...
Instructional Video8:13
TED Talks

TED: What happens to gas stations when the world goes electric? | Emily Grubert

12th - Higher Ed
When the world goes fully electric, what happens to the cars, tools and livelihoods that rely on fossil fuels? Civil engineer and environmental sociologist Emily Grubert visualizes what a clean energy future will look like, outlining the...
Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: One of the most banned books of all time | Mollie Godfrey

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1998, a school district removed one of American literature's most acclaimed works from its curriculum. Parents pushing for the ban said the book was both "sexually explicit" and "anti-white." The book at the center of this debate was...
Instructional Video5:12
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: One of the most "dangerous" men in American history | Keenan Norris

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1830, David Walker sewed a pamphlet into the lining of a coat. The volume was thin enough to be hidden, but its content was far from insubstantial. At the time, many members of the US government considered this pamphlet to be one of...
News Clip5:42
PBS

U.S. sees concerning rise in STIs, congenital syphilis with no signs of slowing

12th - Higher Ed
New CDC data shows a surge of sexually transmitted infections in the U.S. in recent years. The most significant rise is in syphilis and congenital syphilis, which occurs when mothers pass on the infection to their babies during...
News Clip9:27
PBS

How This Year's Antiracism Protests Differ From Past Social Justice Movements

12th - Higher Ed
Philadelphia protests over the killing of Walter Wallace Jr. represent only the latest in a year of nationwide demonstrations against racism and police violence. The ongoing movement has captured attention and provided political...
News Clip7:03
PBS

World powers look to Djbouti for trade and military access

12th - Higher Ed
Djibouti, a tiny country in Northeast Africa, is situated at the gateway to the Suez Canal, one of the world's busiest shipping routes. While its location is an economic commodity for a country that's half unemployed, it also puts it at...
News Clip9:23
PBS

History of Debt

12th - Higher Ed
History of Debt
News Clip6:59
PBS

Michael Beschloss chronicles American 'Presidents of War'

12th - Higher Ed
"When it came to involving the nascent republic in military conflict, one of the founding fathers' biggest fears was that American presidents would be reckless and aggressive to suit their own agendas. Judy Woodruff sits down with...
News Clip12:42
PBS

Cold War Face-off

12th - Higher Ed
Jim Lehrer discusses the significance of Cold War and the Cuban Missile Crisis with the presidential historians and Sergei Khrushchev, the son of the late Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev. (screening copy available upon request)
News Clip12:39
PBS

Islam Struggles for Understanding

12th - Higher Ed
The debate on whether to build a mosque near Ground Zero has become a touchy subject for many and raised questions over U.S. views on Islam. Gwen Ifill gets three perspectives from the Rev. Welton Gaddy of The Interfaith Alliance,...
News Clip8:13
PBS

Doctors’ Role in Military Interrogation

12th - Higher Ed
Doctors' role in enhanced military interrogation 'clearly violates' ethics
News Clip7:24
PBS

What mass deportation would mean for Salvadoran families in the U.S.

12th - Higher Ed
For the Velasco family, life in California feels like an American dream. But having stayed in the U.S. under a program called Temporary Protected Status, it's a dream that may soon end. President Trump plans to halt TPS for hundreds of...
News Clip10:27
PBS

The little-known story of the Republican Party’s 1st presidential nominee

12th - Higher Ed
In a new book, NPR’s Steve Inskeep has chronicled the little-known story of how the illegitimate son of an immigrant rose to become the Republican Party’s first presidential nominee in 1856 -- with a lot of help from his wife. Lisa...
News Clip6:59
PBS

Survey: Muslim-Americans

12th - Higher Ed
Nearly 10 years after the 9/11 attacks and with the American military involved in multiple Muslim nations, a Gallup survey showed strong positive feelings among Muslim-Americans about their prospects in this country. Ray Suarez discusses...
News Clip13:43
PBS

Founding Fathers (July 5, 2004)

12th - Higher Ed
Ray Suarez speaks with three historians, Richard Brookhiser, Ron Chernow and Jan Lewis, about what the founding fathers might have thought of America today.
News Clip6:28
PBS

White Americans Feel Ceiling Effect

12th - Higher Ed
A new study shows that since 2006 whites have grown more pessimistic about their economic outlook while African-Americans and Latinos have grown more optimistic. Ray Suarez talks with Matt Barreto of Latino Decisions and Ellis Cose,...
News Clip9:11
PBS

Andy Card And Rahm Emanuel On What Trump Is Doing Right — And Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
Governing in a crisis like the novel coronavirus pandemic can define a presidency. What lessons does history have to offer as a guide? Judy Woodruff reports and talks to former Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who was President Obama’s chief...
News Clip7:28
PBS

For Great Sioux Nation, Black Hills Can't Be Bought for $1.3-Billion (August 24, 2011)

12th - Higher Ed
Nine Sioux tribes have been locked in a land dispute since 1877, when the government broke a treaty setting aside the Black Hills as part of their reservation. However, there is a chance that the Great Sioux Nation's long struggle to...
News Clip7:09
PBS

A Career Truck Driver On Why His Is No Longer 'A Middle-Class Job'

12th - Higher Ed
Jobs in the trucking industry are increasingly threatened by technology and the rise of driverless trucks. But what explains the contradictory dynamic between fears of job elimination and a current shortage of truck drivers in the U.S.?...
News Clip9:39
PBS

Retracing Roots with 'The African-American National Biography' (April 16, 2008)

12th - Higher Ed
Renowned African-American writers Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham discuss their joint project, 'The African-American National Biography'.
News Clip7:38
PBS

In desperate quest to reach U.S., Central American migrants fear gangs, police

12th - Higher Ed
Around 3,000 Hondurans are currently traveling through Guatemala on their way to the U.S. President Trump has threatened to close the U.S.-Mexico border if the caravan isn't stopped. But migrants say they fear not just deportation, but...
News Clip16:42
PBS

What Dr. Fauci wants you to know about face masks and staying home as virus spreads

12th - Higher Ed
As COVID-19 spreads across the country, there has been some debate over the need for government stay-at-home orders, whether Americans should be wearing masks in public and how the coronavirus spreads. Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National...