Instructional Video4:34
Curated Video

Grouping Insects

3rd - Higher Ed
Miss Palomine brings her Insect Book outside with her to help identify insects. She talks about the different types of insects and what differentiates them from one another. She provides interesting facts about insects.
Instructional Video4:17
Curated Video

All That Plants Do for Us

3rd - 8th
Miss Palomine talks about the number of plants that we eat. This leads to a discussion of all the ways in which we use plants.
Instructional Video4:44
Curated Video

Socrates Cleans House

K - 8th
We find Miss Palomine doing her spring cleaning. She tells us that Socrates is also cleaning and needs help sorting all this things. Miss Palomine and the student then help Socrates sort his things into groups.
Instructional Video4:51
Curated Video

Grouping and Regrouping

K - 8th
Miss Palomine stops at a bakery to purchase a half dozen donuts for her meeting. She changes her mind several times about what combination of donuts she wants and, in the process, demonstrates grouping and regrouping.
Instructional Video4:21
Curated Video

Reuse and Recycle

3rd - Higher Ed
Miss Palomine sorts her garbage into recyclable and nonrecyclable items. She then explains to the student that another way we can help the Earth is to reuse, and she provides examples.
Instructional Video9:09
The Guardian

David Bowie remembered by two of his biggest fans

Pre-K - Higher Ed
David Bowie’s death stunned the world. Musician and actor Gary Kemp, a lifelong fan, and Nicholas Pegg, author of Bowie bible The Complete David Bowie, reflect on life without the Starman as they take a tour of some of Bowie’s London...
Instructional Video7:29
The Guardian

I'll write as if I'm trying to get sacked': Stewart Lee in conversation with Alan Moore

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Writers Stewart Lee and Alan Moore discuss the term ‘content provider’ the title of Lee’s new book, as well as how to dismantle genres, balance different voices, and play with the parameters of writing a newspaper column or a graphic novel
Instructional Video15:21
The Guardian

‘I care, but I don't care’: What people in the UK really think about life after the Queen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Far away from pomp and ritual, John Harris and John Domokos spend time in three places where the themes of the Elizabethan age played out: Milton Keynes, inner-city Birmingham, and a former Yorkshire pit village. What emerges is a much...
Instructional Video7:25
The Guardian

Sucker punch: small town boxing in rural America is going mainstream - but who benefits?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Rough N Rowdy offers local hopefuls, most with limited skills and little training, the chance to win $1,000 and make a name for themselves in the boxing ring. The event is being broadcast by Barstool Sports, whose CEO, Dave Portnoy,...
Instructional Video11:00
The Guardian

My weekend at man camp: trauma, wrestling and tears

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Earlier this year, pre-pandemic, Adam Gabbatt spent a weekend with Sacred Sons, a male-only community that aims to help men explore their vulnerable side and listen to their emotions. In an era when masculinity is under scrutiny, could...
Instructional Video8:12
The Guardian

Why horror keeps creeping into black drama

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Shows such as I May Destroy You, Atlanta and Insecure depict a wide spectrum of black life, from hilarity to mundanity – but all these shows, at times, also have an impending sense of doom. This feeling of horror, this looming sense of...
Instructional Video13:31
The Guardian

Paul Morley interviews Heaven 17

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Paul Morley speaks to 80s band Heaven 17t
Instructional Video5:19
The Guardian

How the Covid pandemic has led to more Channel crossings

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A record number of people are expected to cross the Channel to the UK in small boats this year to claim asylum.Amid the coronavirus pandemic, more than 10,000 people have already made the dangerous and potentially fatal 21-mile journey...
Instructional Video6:18
The Guardian

Neuro-cuisine: exploring the science of flavour

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Tamal Ray, anaesthetist and baker, Professor Charles Spence, experimental psychologist at the University of Oxford and chef Jozef Youssef embark on a journey to decode the science of flavour. Professor Spence and Jozef challenge Tamal to...
Instructional Video7:35
The Guardian

Why the first US cowboys were black

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Historians estimate that one in four cowboys were African American, though you’d never guess because the conventional Hollywood image of a cowboy is a white man. Black cowboys have been written out of history, along with the original...
Instructional Video5:39
The Guardian

We Ride, We Pray

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the video series ‘My People’, Guardian Australia explores the peculiar subcultures and niche communities bringing people together across the country. With the breakdown of more traditional communities, these new groups of shared...
Instructional Video11:05
The Guardian

Inside a long Covid clinic: ’I look normal, but my body is breaking down’

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The Guardian has had unique access to University College London hospital's long Covid clinic where patients are treated for a multitude of different chronic symptoms ranging from ongoing fatigue to issues with taste and smell. Some...
Instructional Video8:14
The Guardian

Should robots have faces?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Many robots are designed with a face – yet don't use their 'eyes' to see, or speak through their 'mouth'. Given that some of the more realistic humanoid robots are widely considered to be unnerving, and that humans have a propensity to...
Instructional Video8:58
The Guardian

A love letter to Notting Hill Carnival

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Notting Hill carnival, held every summer in west London, is the biggest street party in Europe. Coverage of the event often focuses on negative stories and misses the celebration of the community and culture that makes the Carnival so...
Instructional Video7:06
The Guardian

From Burna Boy to Beyoncé: how black culture is embracing its African roots

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In recent years, Africans on the continent and in the diaspora have become leading voices in black culture – in music, film, fashion, social media, comedy and even our memes. When Grace Shutti was growing up, black culture usually...
Instructional Video8:28
The Guardian

What it's like to find out you’re autistic aged 33

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Meet Keran Bunker, who has always struggled to keep jobs or a place to live and did not find out he had autism with ADHD until he was 33. Relying on prompts and visual cues to get through the day, his condition frequently sabotages his...
Instructional Video8:57
The Guardian

Jamal Edwards breaks taboos around men's mental health

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Suicide is the biggest killer of men under 45 in the UK. Jamal Edwards, founder of film-making company SBTV, asks why so many men are taking their own lives, and whether society’s stereotypes of masculinity have stopped men from seeking...
Instructional Video14:04
The Guardian

Extinction Rebellion: 'We're the planet's fire alarm'

Pre-K - Higher Ed
For the last 10 days Extinction Rebellion has blocked roads, railways and bridges in a campaign of peaceful civil disobedience. Now that the period of action has wound down, Owen Jones asks some of the organisers what they have achieved,...
Instructional Video8:22
The Guardian

The story of No 20: how does a London family home end up empty in 2018?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This is the Portland street estate, a community ravaged by years of cuts. The council made a bold move in an attempt to turn the estate around – but how did the £1 homes experiment turn out?