Instructional Video5:04
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What makes something "Kafkaesque"? - Noah Tavlin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The term Kafkaesque has entered the vernacular to describe unnecessarily complicated and frustrating experiences, especially with bureaucracy. But does standing in a long line to fill out confusing paperwork really capture the richness...
Instructional Video5:08
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Norse myth that inspired "The Lord of the Rings" | Iseult Gillespie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The dwarves were master craftspeople. One dwarf, Andvari, forged marvelous creations. He often took the form of a fish and, one day, he swam to the land of the water nymphs, who guarded mounds of gold. When the nymphs laughed at his...
Instructional Video5:28
TED-Ed

TED-ED: A brief history of melancholy - Courtney Stephens

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you are a living, breathing human being, chances are you have felt sad at least a few times in your life. But what exactly is melancholy, and what (if anything) should we do about it? Courtney Stephens details our still-evolving...
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Inside a cartoonist's world - Liza Donnelly

Pre-K - Higher Ed
From cave drawings to the Sunday paper, artists have been visualizing ideas -- cartoons -- for centuries. New Yorker cartoonist Liza Donnelly walks us through the many stages every cartoon goes through, starting with an idea and turning...
Instructional Video17:27
TED Talks

Odes to vice and consequences - Felix Dennis

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. Media big shot Felix Dennis roars his fiery, funny, sometimes racy original poetry, revisiting haunting memories...
Instructional Video6:48
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Vampires: Folklore, fantasy and fact - Michael Molina

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The myth of the bloodsucking vampire has stalked humans from ancient Mesopotamia to 18th-century Eastern Europe, but it has differed in the terrifying details. So, how did we arrive at the popular image we know, love and fear today? And...
Instructional Video5:27
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why should you read "One Hundred Years of Solitude"? - Francisco Diez-Buzo

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Gabriel Garcia Marquez's novel "One Hundred Years of Solitude" brought Latin American literature to the forefront of the global imagination and earned Garcia Marquez the 1982 Nobel Prize for Literature. What makes the novel so...
Instructional Video2:04
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: To Make Use of Water by Safia Elhillo

Pre-K - Higher Ed
An animated interpretation of Safia Elhillo's poem "To Make Use of Water"
Instructional Video4:57
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How rollercoasters affect your body - Brian D. Avery

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1895, crowds flooded Coney Island to see America's first-ever looping coaster: the Flip Flap Railway. But its thrilling flip caused cases of severe whiplash, neck injury and even ejections. Today, coasters can pull off far more...
Instructional Video2:18
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Mysteries of vernacular: Robot - Jessica Oreck and Rachael Teel

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1920, Czech writer Karel _apek wrote a play about human-like machines, thereby inventing the term robot from the Central European word for forced labor. Jessica Oreck and Rachael Teel explain how the science fiction staple earned its...
Instructional Video4:25
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Alex Gendler: Why should you read "The Master and Margarita"?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The Devil has come to town. But don't worry– all he wants to do is stage a magic show. This absurd premise forms the central plot of Mikhail Bulgakov's masterpiece, "The Master and Margarita." Its blend of political satire, historical...
Instructional Video20:51
TED Talks

Sugata Mitra: Kids can teach themselves

12th - Higher Ed
Speaking at LIFT 2007, Sugata Mitra talks about his Hole in the Wall project. Young kids in this project figured out how to use a PC on their own -- and then taught other kids. He asks, what else can children teach themselves?
Instructional Video4:56
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Zen k_ans: unsolvable enigmas designed to break your brain - Puqun Li

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How do we explain the unexplainable? This question has inspired numerous myths, religious practices and scientific inquiries. But Zen Buddhists practicing throughout China from the 9th to 13th century asked a different question - why do...
Instructional Video5:30
TED-Ed

TED-ED: A brief history of goths - Dan Adams

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What do fans of atmospheric post-punk music have in common with ancient barbarians? Not much ... so why are both known as _goths"? Is it a weird coincidence _ or is there a deeper connection stretching across the centuries? Dan Adams...
Instructional Video4:55
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Leonora Neville: The princess who rewrote history

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Anna Komnene, daughter of Byzantine emperor Alexios, spent the last decade of her life creating a 500-page history of her father's reign called "The Alexiad." As a princess writing about her own family, she had to balance her loyalty to...
Instructional Video5:11
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The myth of Thor's journey to the land of giants - Scott A. Mellor

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Thor-son of Odin, god of thunder, and protector of mankind-struggled mightily against his greatest challenge yet: opening a bag of food. How had the mighty god fallen so far? Scott Mellor tells the myth of Thor's journey to Utgard.
Instructional Video11:38
Crash Course

100 Years of Solitude Part 1: Crash Course Literature 306

12th - Higher Ed
Our first of two episodes about Gabriel Garcia Marquez's novel, 100 Years of Solitude. This week, we're looking at the Buendia family, and their many generations of people with the same names. We'll also look at the fascinating way the...
Instructional Video4:32
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can love and independence coexist? | Tanya Boucicaut

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Baritone thunder. Snarling winds. Consuming downpours. Okeechobee, the hurricane of 1928, forced many to flee their ruined communities. But for Janie Crawford, it inspired an unexpected homecoming. So begins Zora Neale Hurston's...
Instructional Video4:22
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the rogue AI riddle? - Dan Finkel

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A hostile artificial intelligence called NIM has taken over the world's computers. You're the only person skilled enough to shut it down, and you'll only have one chance. Can you survive and shut off the artificial intelligence? Dan...
Instructional Video11:11
Crash Course

Pride and Prejudice, Part 1: Crash Course Literature 411

12th - Higher Ed
In which a series about literature, which is wanting of an episode on Jane Austen, gets the first of two episodes. It's Pride and Prejudice, everybody! John Green talks about Pride and Prejudice as a product of Regency England, gives you...
Instructional Video13:07
TED Talks

Parul Sehgal: An ode to envy

12th - Higher Ed
What is jealousy? What drives it, and why do we secretly love it? No study has ever been able to capture its "loneliness, longevity, grim thrill" -- that is, says Parul Sehgal, except for fiction. In an eloquent meditation she scours...
Instructional Video23:17
TED Talks

C.K. Williams: Poetry of youth and age

12th - Higher Ed
Poet C.K. Williams reads his work at TED2001. As he colors scenes of childhood resentments, college loves, odd neighbors and the literal death of youth, he reminds us of the unique challenges of living.
Instructional Video4:54
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What's the definition of comedy? Banana. - Addison Anderson

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What makes us giggle and guffaw? The inability to define comedy is its very appeal; it is defined by its defiance of definition. Addison Anderson riffs on the philosophy of Henri Bergson and Aristotle to elucidate how a definition draws...
Instructional Video3:14
TED-Ed

TED-ED: When to use apostrophes - Laura McClure

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's possessive. It's often followed by S's. And it's sometimes tricky when it comes to its usage. It's the apostrophe. Laura McClure gives a refresher on when to use apostrophes in writing.