Curated Video
Exploring Syllables
What do the words alligator, elevator, and watermelon have in common? They have four syllables of course! Syllables are the units of pronunciation in language. In this video, students learn to break words into syllables by clapping,...
Wonderscape
History Kids: The Roman Empire
In this video, we explore the lasting legacies of ancient Rome in the areas of art, architecture, engineering, and language. Also, the influence of Latin on language, including the development of Romance languages and the use of Latin...
National Gallery of Art
Teaching Critical Thinking through Art, 1.3: See/Think/Wonder in the Classroom
In this lesson demonstration video, first grade students at Seaton Elementary School in Washington DC practice the See/Think/Wonder routine with reproductions of Wassily Kandinsky’s painting Improvisation 31 (Sea Battle). Classroom...
Curated Video
Three Michelangelos in Florence: Great Art Cities
In this episode we look at three less well known works by Michelangelo, including a Pieta he made for his own tomb, a controversial naked Jesus Christ created when he was just a teenager, and a Bacchus rejected by the man who...
Curated Video
ASL Signs for Community Helpers | Volunteer Signs
This video is part 3 in our Public Services series and all about signs for people who volunteer in the community. Whether you volunteer in your local food bank, nursing home, museum, voting polls, animal shelter or somewhere else, we...
Tate
Art & Language – Conceptual Art, Mirrors and Selfies | TateShots
The collective Art & Language was founded in Coventry, England by Michael Baldwin, David Bainbridge, Terry Atkinson and Harold Hurrell in the early 1960s, and the critic and art historian Charles Harrison and the artist Mel Ramsden both...
Schooling Online
English Essentials - Venturing into Visuals - Visual Techniques, Body Language, Text & Intertextuality (Stage 5, Years/Grades 9-10)
In today’s lesson, we’ll venture further into visual techniques. Grab your notes as we delve into the finer details of images, including body language and text. We’ve also thrown in some more complex techniques to help you get ahead...
Curated Video
Step Inside Van Gogh's "Starry Night" with Virtual Reality! | Art Attack Master Works
Art Attack is back! We partnered with our friends at VR Scout to bring you a season full of virtual reality art made in Tilt Brush. This time, we asked artist George Peaslee to recreate famous paintings in virtual reality, so we can all...
Curated Video
Step Inside the World of Frida Kahlo "The Two Fridas" | Art Attack Master Works
Art Attack is back! We partnered with our friends at VR Scout to bring you a season full of virtual reality art made in Tilt Brush. This time, we asked artist Estella Tse to recreate famous paintings in virtual reality, so we can all...
Life Noggin
Why Do You Understand Language?
Have you ever wondered why you can understand the words other people say? How is it possible that our brains can turn noise into language? Click here to see more videos: https://www.youtube.com/user/lifenoggin?sub_confirmation=1 Life...
Curated Video
Step Inside the World of "American Gothic" | Art Attack Master Works
We partnered with our friends at VR Scout to bring you a season full of virtual reality art made in Tilt Brush. This time, we asked artist Anna Solomko to recreate famous paintings in virtual reality, so we can all experience the magic...
Tate
John Smith – 'Playing With the Power of Language' | TateShots
John Smith is a British artist and filmmaker. Inspired by conceptual art and structural film, since 1972 Smith has made over 40 film, video and installation works, that have been shown internationally in galleries, cinemas and on...
Tate Kids
Photography and Sign Language | Tate Kids
Find out about photography and sign language with playful artists Adam Broomberg and Oliver Chanarin. ---- Play, make and learn about art and artists on Tate Kids http://www.tate.org.uk/kids
Wonderscape
Hyperbole: The Art of Exaggeration in Literature
This video unpacks hyperbole, a figure of speech that uses intentional exaggeration for emphasis or humor. It demonstrates hyperbole's widespread use in literature, referencing works by Mark Twain and Lewis Carroll, and includes an...
Wonderscape
Understanding Similes: The Art of Comparison in Language
New ReviewThis video examines similes, a key figure of speech used for comparison in writing. It explains how similes, characterized by the use of "like" or "as," differ from metaphors and enhance clarity and impact in communication. The video...
Tate
Michael Craig-Martin — 'I'm Interested in Language' | TateShots
Looking back over his long career, artist Michael Craig-Martin explains why the same ideas drive him today as when he first started out. In the early 1970s Michael Craig-Martin created his famous sculpture An Oak Tree. The work consists...
Tate
Rose English – 'Exploring Language in Public' | TateShots
Rose English introduces the Tate Liverpool exhibition Keywords and reflects on looks back at the radical art of 1980s Britain. This was a tumultuous decade in Britain, marked by many forms of oppositional politics which had a direct...
Curated Video
Metaphors and Similes
Metaphors and Similes explores metaphors and similes by interpreting literal and figurative meanings.
TED-Ed
TED-Ed: The chaotic brilliance of artist Jean-Michel Basquiat - Jordana Moore Saggese
Like Beat writers who composed their work by shredding and reassembling scraps of writing, artist Jean-Michel Basquiat used similar techniques to remix his materials. Pulling in splintered anatomy, reimagined historical scenes and...
TED-Ed
TED-ED: Did Shakespeare write his plays? - Natalya St. Clair and Aaron Williams
Some people question whether Shakespeare really wrote the works that bear his name _ or whether he even existed at all. Could it be true that the greatest writer in the English language was as fictional as his plays? Natalya St. Clair...
TED-Ed
TED-ED: Why Shakespeare loved iambic pentameter - David T. Freeman and Gregory Taylor
Shakespeare sometimes gets a bad rap in high schools for his complex plots and antiquated language. But a quick peek into the rhythm of his words reveals a poet deeply rooted in the way people spoke in his time - and still speak today....
TED-Ed
TED-ED: How to write descriptively - Nalo Hopkinson
The point of fiction is to cast a spell, a momentary illusion that you are living in the world of the story. But as a writer, how do you suck your readers into your stories in this way? Nalo Hopkinson shares some tips for how to use...
Clarendon Learning
Capitalization Rules for Kids | Learn the capitalization rules in a fun interactive video for kids
In this video we learn how and when to capitalize. We learn about 6 main capitalization rules, the difference between common and proper nouns, and many other techniques so that students will learn when and when not to capitalize words or...
Clarendon Learning
What are Compound Words for Kids | Learn about the 3 Kinds of Compound Words.
You've heard them, but you may not have known it. In this video we are going to learn all about compound words. So, what are compound words? Compound words are creating when smaller words are joined together to make new words with...
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