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Instructional Video10:07
Curated Video

How Does Language Move? Crash Course Geography

12th - Higher Ed
While we can’t explore every cultural trait in the world, language is an important system of spoken, signed, or written symbols humans use to express themselves. It’s a major marker of identity that often unites members of the same...
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Instructional Video4:42
Big Think

How Spanish, not English, was nearly the world's language | John Lewis Gladdis

6th - 11th
Want to know the reason North America speaks English and not Spanish? It all boils down to a single day in the English Channel in August of 1588, says Yale University history professor John Lewis Gaddis. The Spanish Armada was cleverly...
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Instructional Video10:01
TED Talks

TED: 4 reasons to learn a new language | John McWhorter

12th - Higher Ed
English is fast becoming the world's universal language, and instant translation technology is improving every year. So why bother learning a foreign language? Linguist and Columbia professor John McWhorter shares four alluring benefits...
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Instructional Video6:46
TED Talks

Daniel Bögre Udell: How to save a language from extinction

12th - Higher Ed
As many as 3,000 languages could disappear within the next 80 years, all but silencing entire cultures. In this quick talk, language activist Daniel Bögre Udell shows how people around the world are finding new ways to revive ancestral...
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Instructional Video14:33
TED Talks

David Peterson: Why language is humanity's greatest invention

12th - Higher Ed
Civilization rests upon the existence of language, says language creator David Peterson. In a talk that's equal parts passionate and hilarious, he shows how studying, preserving and inventing new languages helps us understand our...
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Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What do all languages have in common? | Cameron Morin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Language is endlessly variable. Each of us can come up with an infinite number of sentences in our native language, and we're able to do so from an early age— almost as soon as we start to communicate in sentences. How is this possible?...
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Instructional Video14:16
IDG TECHtalk

Which programming language should you learn?

Higher Ed
Selecting which programming language is most appropriate to learn can be a daunting task. While there is overlap among them, they each excel at different functions. InfoWorld senior writer Serdar Yegulalp joins Juliet to discuss the...
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Instructional Video6:20
National Film Board of Canada

To Wake Up the Nakota Language

12th - Higher Ed
Across North America, Indigenous languages are at risk of disappearing. “When you don’t know your language or your culture, you don’t know who you are,” says Armand McArthur, one of the last fluent Nakota speakers in Pheasant Rump First...
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Instructional Video2:58
Curated Video

The Diversity of Sign Languages

12th - Higher Ed
Linguist Carol Padden (UC San Diego), gives us a taste of the extraordinary geographical diversity of sign languages throughout the world.
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Instructional Video4:56
Curated Video

Signing As Language

12th - Higher Ed
Sign language linguist Carol Padden relates the importance of Bill Stokoe’s pioneering work for developing a deeper understanding, not only of sign language, but of the linguistic structure of all languages.
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Instructional Video2:46
Curated Video

The Roots of Sign Language

12th - Higher Ed
UC San Diego linguist Carol Padden describes how, while we now recognize that gesture and sign language are structurally very different, linguists are now carefully examining how gesture might have originally given rise to sign languages.
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Instructional Video5:41
Curated Video

25 ASL Basics at Disney | Theme Park Signs | Sign Language for Beginners

3rd - Higher Ed
I'm teaching you 25 theme park signs at Disney World! These signs aren't just for Disney parks, they can be used at any theme park or amusement park! We had so much fun making this one and hope you all have fun watching it and learning...
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Instructional Video1:48
Great Big Story

The Choctaw Code Talkers of World War I

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewDiscover the story of the Choctaw soldiers whose native language became a pivotal military code during WWI, baffling the Germans.
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Instructional Video8:50
Curated Video

NLP Filters: How we Interpret the World around us

10th - Higher Ed
New ReviewWe don’t see the world as it is. We see it as our brains interpret it. We become aware of external events through our senses. NLP Filters give a compelling model of how we interpret the world around us and the way it influences...
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Instructional Video12:09
Curated Video

Mythical Language and Idiom: Crash Course World Mythology #41

12th - Higher Ed
It's the end of the world, everybody. Well, it's the end of our mythology series, anyway. This week, we're talking about how mythological themes have made their way into the English language. We're taking on the Herculean task of...
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Instructional Video16:21
TED Talks

TED: The giant leaps in language technology -- and who's left behind | Kalika Bali

12th - Higher Ed
Thousands of languages thrive across the globe, yet modern speech technology -- with all of its benefits -- supports just over a hundred. Computational linguist Kalika Bali dreams of a day when technology acts as a bridge instead of a...
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Instructional Video4:24
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The race to decode a mysterious language | Susan Lupack

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the early 1900s, archaeologist Sir Arthur Evans uncovered nearly 3,000 tablets inscribed with strange symbols. He thought the script, dubbed Linear B, represented the Minoan language, while others came up with their own theories. Was...
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Instructional Video20:07
TED Talks

Mark Pagel: How language transformed humanity

12th - Higher Ed
Biologist Mark Pagel shares an intriguing theory about why humans evolved our complex system of language. He suggests that language is a piece of "social technology" that allowed early human tribes to access a powerful new tool:...
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Instructional Video5:26
Curated Video

What Whistled Speech Tells Us About How the Brain Interprets Language

12th - Higher Ed
You can find groups of people from all over the world who communicate full conversation by whistling. And neuroscientists found how our brain works with whistled language is mind-blowing.
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Instructional Video4:24
TED Talks

Jay Walker: The world's English mania

12th - Higher Ed
Jay Walker explains why two billion people around the world are trying to learn English. He shares photos and spine-tingling audio of Chinese students rehearsing English -- "the world's second language" -- by the thousands.
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Instructional Video6:50
TED Talks

TED: Language shouldn't be a barrier to climate action | Sophia Kianni

12th - Higher Ed
Most scientific literature is written only in English, creating an alarming knowledge gap for the 75 percent of the world who don't speak it. That's a big problem for climate change -- because it's hard to take action on something you...
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Instructional Video10:51
Curated Video

Language, Voice, and Holden Caulfield: The Catcher in the Rye Part 1

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green examines JD Salinger's novel The Catcher in the Rye. John pulls out the old school literary criticism by examining the text itself rather than paying attention to the biographical or historical context of the novel...
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Instructional Video4:55
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How interpreters juggle two languages at once - Ewandro Magalhaes

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Language is complex, and when abstract or nuanced concepts get lost in translation, the consequences may be catastrophic. Given the complexities of language and cultural exchange, how do these epic miscommunications not happen all the...
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Instructional Video8:42
Curated Video

Nonexistent Objects & Imaginary Worlds: Crash Course Philosophy

12th - Higher Ed
Today we transition between units on language and aesthetics with a discussion of nonexistent and imaginary objects. Is it possible to make true assertions about things that aren’t real? We’ll explore Meinong’s Jungle and the concept of...

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