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Instructional Video4:45
Ancient Lights Media

Atlas of the United States: Hawaii

6th - 8th
This program explores the geography, history, and some important cultural features of the Pacific Region of the United States. The individual states of California, Oregon, Washington, Alaska and Hawaii are presented in detail.
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Instructional Video6:12
Ancient Lights Media

Russia: Introduction and Coastal Regions

6th - 8th
This clip looks at the physical features and climate of Russia's coastal regions.
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Instructional Video15:13
The Cynical Historian

Silence (2016) | Based on a True Story

9th - 11th
Silence has the makings of a good movie, but it bombed at the box office, and for a good reason. The plot is fascinating, and the history behind it is even more so. But the movie ended up being a boring mess. I think there is a gem...
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Instructional Video5:21
Ancient Lights Media

North Korea

6th - 8th
Video Atlas of Asia: This clip looks at the physical features, climate and culture of North Korea.
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Instructional Video5:24
Ancient Lights Media

South Korea

6th - 8th
Video Atlas of Asia: This clip looks at the physical features, climate and culture of South Korea.
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Instructional Video3:38
TED-Ed

Gyotaku: The Ancient Japanese Art of Printing Fish

9th - 12th Standards
An art form rich in cultural significance and historical ties, gyotaku is the ancient Japanese art of printing fish. Your class will not only learn about the competitive fishing culture of nineteenth century Japan and an important...
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Instructional Video13:33
Crash Course

Japan in the Heian Period and Cultural History: Crash Course World History 227

9th - 12th Standards
When your class thinks of medieval history, they probably think of European castles and knights. But they may not know that the Heian period in Japan, which coincided with the Middle Ages in Europe, saw a significant development in...
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Instructional Video13:41
Crash Course

Iran's Revolutions: Crash Course World History 226

9th - 12th Standards
The 1979 Iranian Revolution changed the identity of Iran, and in many ways, the Middle East as a whole. High schoolers learn more about the Persian region, history, and government in a brief but explanatory video from Crash Course World...
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Instructional Video12:39
1
1
Crash Course

Japan, Kabuki, and Bunraku: Crash Course Theater #23

9th - 12th Standards
Kabuki and Bunraku may sound like new age exercise routines, but they're actually types of Japanese theater. An informational video describes the history of theater in Japan during the nineteenth century. The resource includes a...
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Instructional Video12:51
Crash Course

Population, Sustainability, and Malthus: Crash Course World History 215

9th - 12th Standards
Thomas Malthus posed the most famous, and most easily disproven, theory about projected population growth in economic history. What did he get wrong—and why? Explore the Malthusian Theory of Population with a Crash Course video that...
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Instructional Video9:10
Crash Course

How World War I Started: Crash Course World History 209

9th - 12th Standards
Why was the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand significant enough to begin the First World War? Crash Course World History provides a video that covers the events of July and August 1914, including the political implications of...
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Instructional Video11:42
Crash Course

Mythical Mountains: Crash Course World Mythology #33

7th - 12th
Ain't no mountain high enough to keep scholars from watching the 33rd installment in the 41-part Crash Course World Mythology series. Viewers consider stories and myths about mountains and their meanings. In particular, they learn about...
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Instructional Video2:50
MinuteEarth

How These Sea Shells Know the Weather in Greenland

6th - 12th Standards
Does a single-celled organism know more about the history of our planet than we do? A video explains how single-celled organisms manage to build a house and hold the secrets to the weather. They contain the information about the changes...

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