Instructional Video17:50
TED Talks

TED: The secret to mastering life's biggest transitions | Bruce Feiler

12th - Higher Ed
How do you navigate life's growing number of transitions with meaning, purpose and skill? Writer Bruce Feiler offers a powerful way to handle uncertain, painful and confusing times -- or "lifequakes", as he calls them. Learn how to equip...
Instructional Video4:48
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How one journalist risked her life to hold murderers accountable - Christina Greer

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Ida B. Wells was an investigative journalist, civil rights leader, and anti-lynching advocate who fought for equality and justice. -- In the late 1800’s, lynchings were happening all over the American South, often without any...
Instructional Video5:09
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The secret society of the Great Dismal Swamp | Dan Sayers

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Straddling Virginia and North Carolina is an area that was once described as the "most repulsive of American possessions." By 1728, it was known as the Great Dismal Swamp. But while many deemed it uninhabitable, recent findings suggest...
Instructional Video22:22
Mr. Beat

Why did the American Political Parties Switch?

6th - 12th
Mr. Beat finally tackles the complicated story of the Southern Strategy and the Party Switch...aka The Big Switch...aka The Big Lie. Wait, the Big Lie? Some people think it's made up? Really?
Instructional Video2:50
Curated Video

Leading By Example

12th - Higher Ed
UCSD Prof. of Chinese Studies Karl Gerth describes how the West should set a better example in a number of key public policy areas in its dealings with China, and how a close examination of China can help us improve as well.
Instructional Video2:16
Curated Video

The Civil War Battle for Bread

9th - Higher Ed
When the women of Richmond, Virginia couldn’t afford to buy bread during the American Civil War, they incited the largest civil disturbance the Confederacy had ever seen.
Instructional Video2:43
Curated Video

Frederick Douglass' Composite Nation

9th - Higher Ed
Abolitionist and social reformer Frederick Douglass believed that the U.S. could become the greatest nation in history – if it accepted the defining principles set out in his speech, Composite Nation.
Instructional Video2:25
Curated Video

The Explosive Story of Dynamite Hill

9th - Higher Ed
When Black residents moved into one neighborhood in Birmingham, Alabama, White supremacists unleashed a wave of terror against the community.
Instructional Video10:21
TLDR News

Why Third Parties Struggle in the US Democratic and Republican Dominance in America - TLDR News

12th - Higher Ed
Politics in the United States tend to be dominated by the two major parties, with third parties rarely playing a major role. So in this video, we explain who the biggest other parties are, what they stand for and why they struggle to...
Instructional Video2:27
Curated Video

Ida B. Wells: Journalist and Anti-Lynching Activist

9th - Higher Ed
Investigative journalist Ida B. Wells made it her mission to exposing the horrors of racism in the American South, but it wasn't easy.
Instructional Video2:31
Curated Video

When the Youth of Birmingham Changed History

9th - Higher Ed
In 1963, school children from Birmingham, Alabama skipped class to demonstrate for racial equality. Met with police violence, they helped to bring about significant change. The Birmingham Children's Crusade, as it was known, has gone...
Instructional Video1:36
Curated Video

The Cotton Gin: An Infamous Invention

9th - Higher Ed
It mechanised cotton production by separating cotton from seeds – but increased the demand for slave labor. Discover how the cotton gin changed 18th century American society.
News Clip0:15
Sherman Grinberg Film Library

Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt in cap and gown

Higher Ed
6/16/37: The Roosevelts stand outdoors, in caps, gowns, and hoods, with faculty of John Marshall Law School; FDR is at right and Eleanor stands with college dean Alexander Ormsby at center; she was awarded an honorary degree at...