The NFB collection includes documentaries, animations, experimental films, fiction and interactive works. It showcases films that take a stand on issues of global importance that matter to Canadians—stories about the environment, human rights, international conflict, the arts and more.
Instructors: additional features such as chapter creation (creating snippets of films), teaching guides, and playlists are available from the NFB Campus platform. Contact library staff for instructions on how to create your NFB Campus account.
Curio.ca gives teachers and students streaming access to the best in educational video and audio from CBC and Radio-Canada. You'll find documentaries from television and radio, news reports and more.
Criterion on Demand provides online access to feature films that are educationally relevant for Canadian Higher Education Institutions. Most films are available with English and French subtitles.
Can-Core is a core curriculum content platform for use in Canadian schools. The content is 100% Canadian Produced and has been selected for its strong curriculum fit.
Academic Video Online is a comprehensive video subscription with titles spanning the a range of subject areas including anthropology, business, counseling, film, health, history, music, and more.
This is a collection of historically relevant VHS tapes. Contents include Yukon history, Yukon First Nations, Indigenous history, and Indigenous culture.
30 filmed performances including: comedies such as One Man, Two Guvnors; 20th Century classics including A Streetcar Named Desire, Les Blancs, and Yerma; 9 Shakespeare plays; literary adaptations such as: Frankenstein and Small Island; and Greek Classics including Antigone and Medea.
A subcollection of Drama Online, Playwrights Canada Press offers over 230 plays from notable and award-winning authors including Daniel MacIvor and Hannah Moscovitch. Plays in this collection have won prizes including the Susan Smith Blackburn Prize, the Governor General’s Literary Award for Drama, the Windham-Campbell Prize and the Siminovitch Prize.
Based on a true story, the film depicts a youth lacrosse team that was set up to help combat an onslaught of youth suicide in the community of Kugluktuk, Nunavut.