Instructional Video4:59
SciShow

How We Fixed the Most Radioactive Place on Earth

12th - Higher Ed
Once upon a time, there was a lake that was so radioactive, that standing on its shore for more than an hour would almost definitely kill you. Join Olivia to learn how it got that bad in the first place, and what was done to fix it!
Instructional Video5:37
TED-Ed

How one person saved over 2,000 children from the Nazis | Iseult Gillespie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1943, Irena Sendler and Janina Grabowska froze when they heard Gestapo pounding on the front door. Knowing she was minutes from arrest, Irena tossed Janina her most dangerous possession: a glass jar containing the names of over 2,000...
Instructional Video4:59
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The art forger who tricked the Nazis

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It was one of the strangest trials in Dutch history. The defendant in a 1947 case was an art forger who had counterfeited millions of dollars worth of paintings. But he wasn’t arguing his innocence— in fact, his life depended on proving...
Instructional Video5:18
TED-Ed

The strange history of the world's most stolen painting | Noah Charney

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Throughout six centuries, the Ghent Altarpiece, also called "The Adoration of the Mystic Lamb," has been burned, forged, and raided in three different wars. It is, in fact, the world's most stolen artwork— and is considered one of the...
Instructional Video12:27
Crash Course

Alan Turing: Crash Course Computer Science

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’re going to take a step back from programming and discuss the person who formulated many of the theoretical concepts that underlie modern computation - the father of computer science himself: Alan Turing. Now normally we try to...
Instructional Video9:26
Crash Course

Foreign Policy: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
Today Craig finishes up our series on U.S. Government and Politics by talking about both the least and most important aspect of government: foreign policy. Foreign policy is important because it has the potential to affect the largest...
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

How We Fixed the Most Radioactive Place on Earth

12th - Higher Ed
Once upon a time, there was a lake that was so radioactive, that standing on its shore for more than an hour would almost definitely kill you. Join Olivia to learn how it got that bad in the first place, and what was done to fix it!
Instructional Video5:34
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Ugly history: Japanese American incarceration camps | Densho

Pre-K - Higher Ed
On December 7, 1941, 16 year-old Aki Kurose shared in the horror of millions of Americans when Japanese planes attacked Pearl Harbor. Unbeknownst to her, this shared experience would soon leave her family and over 120,000 Japanese...
Instructional Video11:07
Crash Course

The Computer and Turing: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
Computers and computing have changed a lot over the History of Science but ESPECIALLY over the last 100 years. In this episode of Crash Course History of Science, we have a look at that history around World War Two and how that conflict...
Instructional Video11:04
Crash Course

The Atomic Bomb: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
The story picks up where we left off last time, with Einstein writing the president of his new homeland, the United States, urging him to build a nuclear weapon before Hitler. This is the tale of the most destructive force humans have...
Instructional Video13:09
Curated Video

WWII Sophie Scholl - How a young woman defied Hitler

6th - Higher Ed
WWII Sophie Scholl - How a young woman defied Hitler
Instructional Video12:40
Curated Video

Attack on the WXYZ Complex Two US paratroopers wipe out a whole German company WW2 Docuumentary

6th - Higher Ed
Attack on the WXYZ Complex Two US paratroopers wipe out a whole German company WW2 Docuumentary
Instructional Video2:56
Curated Video

Beating the U-Boats

6th - 12th
How Churchill used geometry to protect his supply convoys during World War Two, by identifying the best shape for convoys to travel in... a circle. Maths - Shape A Twig Math Film. Reinforce and extend the learning required by the...
Instructional Video3:30
Curated Video

Enigma: Cracking The Code

6th - 12th
The Enigma machine could pair up letters in 150 million million ways. How did the machine work to give so many different permutations – and how was the code eventually cracked? Maths - Number A Twig Math Film. Reinforce and extend the...
Instructional Video3:19
Curated Video

Tank Wars

6th - 12th
How an unlikely algebraic equation outdid allied spying efforts at providing insight into Nazi tank production – and helped to win the war. Maths - Algebra A Twig Math Film. Reinforce and extend the learning required by the curriculum....
Instructional Video10:09
Bedtime History

Nancy Wake For Kids

K - 5th
Learn about Nancy Wake, the brave spy and soldier who helped lead the Allies and French Resistance to victory during World War 2.
Instructional Video9:42
Bedtime History

D-Day History For Kids

K - 12th
Learn about the plans leading up to D-Day and its importance as one of the defining battles of World War 2.
Instructional Video2:44
Curated Video

Elizebeth Friedman

9th - Higher Ed
Elizebeth Friedman revolutionized American cryptology and played a crucial role in bringing down mobsters and spy rings in the 20th century.
Instructional Video2:23
Curated Video

Agent Garbo

9th - Higher Ed
Juan Pujol García, a pacifist who became a crucial double agent during WWII, deceived Nazi Germany and aided the D-Day invasion.
Instructional Video2:01
Curated Video

Joint Chiefs

9th - Higher Ed
When the going gets tough, the president calls on the Joint Chiefs of Staff, an advisory council to help make important military decisions.
Instructional Video2:50
Curated Video

Anne Frank

9th - Higher Ed
Anne Frank was a Jewish girl who wrote a diary about her life in hiding from the Nazis during World War II. Her powerful story reflects resilience, hope, and the tragic impact of the Holocaust.
Instructional Video2:20
Curated Video

Korematsu v. United States: Was Internment Legal?

9th - Higher Ed
Korematsu v. United States was a controversial U.S. Supreme Court decision made in the aftermath of the attack on Pearl Harbor. It established that the U.S. government could intern Japanese Americans during WWII as a result of Executive...
Instructional Video2:01
Curated Video

What is Veterans Day?

9th - Higher Ed
Veterans Day takes place every year on November 11 to honor the bravery and sacrifice of all those men and women who fought and died for their country, during war and peacetime.
Instructional Video2:08
Curated Video

Gerald Ford: The Unelected President

9th - Higher Ed
Gerald Ford holds a unique place in the history of U.S. politics – as the only American to hold the office of Vice President and President without ever winning a national election. Who was he, and what was his presidency like?