Not Previously Mentioned
Website: https://ed.ted.com/
TED-Ed includes excellent, engaging videos and support for flipped-class lessons with an incredible community of thinkers and doers.
Pedagogy- Quality learning is baked in to these intriguing videos -- although they're short, they cover a lot of content. Many videos prominently feature women and minorities in positions of expertise, exploration, and discovery. -Jenny Bristol Commonsense Reviewer
You can use TED-Ed's videos and lessons to supplement almost any subject with video learning, basic knowledge checks, and discussion questions. Simply browse by topic or subtopic or search by keyword. You can also filter by target age, content type, subtitles, and more. The content is remarkable and comes from some of the world's best minds -- students are likely to engage with it right away. Videos can be great to watch as a class or to include as part of a flipped classroom.
If you register (for free), you can also customize existing video lessons for your own purposes, or create your own lessons from scratch using videos on the site (the TED-Ed-created ones are of high quality and are a great way to begin a lesson for your students) or with a YouTube link. Then add in informative text, content from the video you want to quiz students on, additional resources, and any discussion questions appropriate for your class.
Interested students can sign up to create TED-style talks as well, on their own or with the class, or you can start a TED-Ed Club at your school. Teachers can sign up for a Masterclass where they can learn how to give their own talks
TED-Ed's mission is to capture and amplify the voices of great educators around the world. We do this by pairing extraordinary educators with talented animators to produce a new library of curiosity-igniting videos. You can nominate a teacher, nominate an animator or suggest a lesson here: http://education.ted.com
This entry in the “3 Minute Teaching With Tech Tip” video series shows how easy it is to ‘flip' any YouTube video with the structured tool set provided at ed.ted.com. These lessons can be public or private, and the easy to use tools let teachers add associated content, a brief quiz, and online discussions associated with the video that is the focus point of the lesson. TedEd is totally free, and teachers get summary feedback on lesson views, quiz results, discussions, etc.
https://www.teachhub.com/classroom-activities-ted-talks-your-students
https://www.commonsense.org/education/website/ted-ed
https://blogs.umass.edu/onlinetools/assessment-centered-tools/teded/
Created By: LaQuanda T. Onyemeh