Free Educational Videos for Students in K-12

Best educational videos to complement children’s learning. Instructional and ‘how to’ videos that explain concepts and help build essential skills. Find thousands of Khan academy videos, Lumos Learning videos along with many other interesting resources from top publishers. Recommend helpful videos to colleagues, friends, or students. Share feedback and submit reviews.


Have and Have Got (Part 1)


By Smrt English

This lesson explains the difference between using "have" as an auxiliary verb and a full verb. Examples of its usage as an auxiliary are given in the present perfect tense. Examples of its usage as a full verb shows possession and obligation.

The Continuous Aspect


By Smrt English

This video introduces the common meaning and focus of all continuous/progressive tenses. The continuous aspect focuses on the duration of an action—what happening between the start and finish of an action.

Auxiliary Verbs (Part 3)


By Smrt English

This video focuses on the auxiliary verb "have". It is used in perfect tenses and formed with a past participle

Auxiliary Verbs (Part 2)


By Smrt English

This video focuses on the auxiliary verb "do". It is used in present or past simple sentences. It is used mainly to ask questions, form negative sentences (using "don't/didn't"), and to emphasize something.

"Active vs Passive Voice" | English Grammar with Educator.com


By Educator

This video explains the difference between active and passive voice that writers use in sentences. It recommends the use of the active voice in most cases.

English Grammar: Run-On Sentences


By Educator

This lesson is on run-on sentences.

Review Parts of a Sentence


By LearnAmericanEnglishOnline

An English teacher explains the main parts of a sentence-subject (he, she)-person, place, thing, idea, and verb-action. Reviews singular and plural. Prepositions and objects are discussed. Some basic information but teacher would be better suited for older students.

Writing – Relative Clauses overview


By English Lessons with Alex (engVid AlexESLvid)

In this overview of relative clauses, I look at identifying and non-identifying clauses, relative pronouns (who, whom, whose, which, that,) and how to use commas when using relative pronouns in your writing. If you are looking for a general overview of these things, this is a good introductory lesson.

Ten Basic Comma Rules


By InTheEnglishCorner

In this video, a professor presents 10 comma rules with examples

ACT English Four


By AccountingED

This video on punctuation reviews the correct uses of colons, hyphens, and apostrophes. It also goes over common errors and examples of incorrect usage