Instructional Video2:27
The Business Professor

Cultural Characteristics Affect Consumer Decisions

Higher Ed
Cultural Characteristics Affect Consumer Decisions
Instructional Video8:28
Easy Languages

What locals think of Guanajuato City, Mexico

12th - Higher Ed
Easy Languages is an international video project aiming at supporting people worldwide to learn languages through authentic street interviews and expose the street culture of participating partner countries abroad. Episodes are produced...
Instructional Video14:20
Rachel's English

English Vocabulary Challenge Day 13

6th - Higher Ed
You can improve your English vocabulary and English pronunciation by studying these vocab words, repeating them along with me to master each sound. We’ll study each word by focusing on how Americans actually pronounce it, and we’ll...
Instructional Video2:20
Curated Video

Fighting for LGBTQ Rights: Is the United States Really United?

9th - Higher Ed
The 10th Amendment to the Constitution allows each state to set its own laws. That's meant that in Colorado, LGBTQIA+ rights have often been repressed. Meet the students at William J. Palmer High School who took their school district to...
Instructional Video5:48
msvgo

Crop Protection: Pests

K - 12th
It explains the need for protecting crop plants from pests and describes common practices used for crop pest management.
Instructional Video4:33
The Africa Channel

Africa on a Plate: Zulu medicinal plants and wildlife

12th - Higher Ed
Explore the continent through this culinary journey as notable African chefs set out to introduce viewers to the foods and cultures of Africa. Chef Lentswe Bhengu travels to the outskirts of Durban, where he learns about his cultural...
Instructional Video9:35
Curated Video

Building the Largest Black-Owned Broadcast Company in the US

Higher Ed
Part 2/6 of the Business out of the Ashes series: The video features Cathy Hughes, the founder and CEO of Radio One, the largest African-American owned and operated media corporation in the United States. In the interview, she shares her...
Instructional Video1:40
Curated Video

Hedy Lamarr: Mother of WiFi

9th - Higher Ed
Did you know? The amazing technology behind Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and GPS was the brainchild of Hollywood actor turned visionary inventor Hedy Lamarr - the Mother of Wi-Fi.
Instructional Video2:26
Curated Video

Dreams, Plans, and Commitment: What it Takes to Start a Small Business

Higher Ed
The video features various individuals sharing their personal stories of trauma, loss, and adversity. They speak about their struggles and the moments of despair they faced. However, they also discuss how they drew strength and courage...
Instructional Video1:48
Curated Video

Keds: America's First Viral Sneakers

9th - Higher Ed
They were the Nike Air of their day – and they helped spark a sneaker revolution! Discover how Keds cornered the market for comfortable footwear in the 1950s and beyond.
Instructional Video8:42
ShortCutsTv

Family and Social Change

Higher Ed
How are family life, structure and relationships changing? And to what extent are these changes a consequence of modernity and postmodernity? This film examines these questions in terms of three types of social change: identity,...
Instructional Video1:47
Curated Video

Tennis for Two: America's First Video Game

9th - Higher Ed
It was pretty basic – but also revolutionary! Find out how American physicist William Higinbotham created Tennis For Two and discover its links to the mysterious Manhattan Project.
Instructional Video1:40
Curated Video

DJ Kool Herc's Turntables: Hip Hop Extraordinaire

9th - Higher Ed
In 1970s New York, 16-year-old Jamaican immigrant Clive Campbell (aka DJ Kool Herc) used his trusty turntables to loop funk records and bring the beat. In the process he helped create one of America's true art forms: hip hop.
Instructional Video2:27
Curated Video

Barbara Jordan: The Black Texan Politician who Broke the Glass Ceiling

9th - Higher Ed
At a time when women and people of colour were all but excluded from the US government, one woman stormed the corridors of power and made them her own. This is the story of Barbara Jordan, the African American from the South who defied...
Instructional Video2:09
Curated Video

John Rollin Ridge: the Native American Novelist Like No Other

9th - Higher Ed
We've had some great American Novelists? You've read some of them in school, right? But one writer you've probably never heard of is John Rollin Ridge, aka Yellow Bird: the first Native American to ever publish a novel about a fictitious...
Instructional Video9:04
Vlogbrothers

What Caused the War? Ukraine and Russia in Historical Context

6th - 11th
In which John explores historical and political context to understand what caused the Russian government's invasion of Ukraine| and how we arrived at this awful now.
Instructional Video10:36
Weird History

What Did Ancient Egyptians Eat

12th - Higher Ed
So what did the ancient Egyptians people eat? What gave them the strength to build the pyramids, to spread out from the Nile, to forge one of the most influential empires the world has ever seen? The answers might surprise you.
Instructional Video3:49
Ancient Lights Media

Japan: Culture

6th - 8th
Video Atlas of Asia: This clip takes a look at some of Japan's unique cultural elements.
Instructional Video19:22
Tom Nicholas

Colonialism - WTF? Introduction to colonialism and imperialism

12th - Higher Ed
In this month's episode of What the Theory?, we take a look at colonialism and imperialism. More specifically we look at the politics of colonialism and the appearance of colonialist ideology in culture. As a primer for my upcoming video...
Instructional Video2:25
Curated Video

Turkey, Assos Theatre

12th - Higher Ed
The theatre of Assos in Asia Minor in Turkey, It was discovered that the theatre which had been set up on the south slope of the ancient city across Lesbos was destroyed during an earthquake. The theatre with 2500 people capacity had...
Instructional Video1:30
The Africa Channel

Acoustic Ancestry

12th - Higher Ed
ACOUSTIC ANCESTRY is a music series of 3-5 minute pieces in which the sounds of little known, surprising, or perhaps lost indigenous African musical instruments are highlighted, along with the stories of their contributions to music....
Instructional Video
Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History

Gilder Lehrman Institute: Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945 1974

9th - 10th
James T. Patterson of Brown University, discusses how the major political, cultural, and economic events of the mid-20th century impacted America from 1945 through Watergate. [39:55]
Instructional Video
Sophia Learning

Sophia: Careers in Psychology: Social & Relational

9th - 10th
This lesson will define and differentiate the various career specialties within the social, relational, and community areas of psychology. Emphasis will be placed on the typical duties and setting(s) for each specialty.