As educators, you’re navigating a challenging landscape: balancing increasing workloads, sparking and sustaining student engagement, developing innovative curricula, and adapting to the rapid pace of change in educational technology—all with limited resources. You’re also championing the humanities and social sciences, highlighting both their economic and humanistic value in a society that needs them now more than ever.

To support you, we offer practical teaching tools, curated resources, and a global community of fellow educators working to make an impact. Together, we can help you streamline your course preparations, enhance your teaching, and elevate student engagement.

Latest resources and events

A detailed botanical illustration from 1608 shows a butterfly perched on the green stalk of a tall plant with layered leaves. Below, a fuzzy caterpillar with red tufts crawls near a cluster of small blossoms. The artwork highlights natural textures and vibrant colors, blending scientific precision with artistic beauty.

10 surprising ways to use JSTOR in your teaching

Did you know JSTOR offers everything from historic cookbooks to powerful text analysis tools? This Mellon Foundation feature highlights 10 surprising ways JSTOR can enrich teaching and learning. Explore how you and your students can use JSTOR in (and beyond) the classroom.

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Live webinar: Working with images and other primary sources on JSTOR: 2025 Update

Discover how to enrich your teaching with images and primary sources from archives, museums, and independent scholars on JSTOR and Artstor on October 2 at 1PM ET. Perfect for educators looking to bring visual and historical materials into the classroom. Can’t make the live event? Register to receive the recording!

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A vibrant 1982 painting by Lois Mailou Jones titled Two African Hairstyles. The artwork features a young girl with a traditional African hairstyle, her head slightly bowed. Behind her is a stylized profile of an African mask or figure in white, adorned with intricate patterns. The background is a rich tapestry of bold geometric shapes and bright colors, including orange, red, green, and black, evoking African cultural motifs and heritage. The composition emphasizes the beauty and cultural significance of African hairstyles and artistry.

Bridge current events and academic scholarship in your classroom

Leverage JSTOR Daily’s pedagogical resources to boost student engagement. Access curated reading lists, annotated primary sources, and classroom activities to foster critical thinking and research skills. Help your students make connections between their world and your course material.

Explore real-world teaching tools

A 17th-century painting by Georges de La Tour featuring a young man receiving a fortune-telling from an elderly woman. He is surrounded by three women, each dressed in traditional clothing with elaborate headscarves. The painting captures a moment of subtle intrigue and interaction between the figures.

Lesson plan: Artstor on JSTOR virtual field trip

Promote equity, boost engagement, and build visual literacy with this ready-to-use virtual field trip lesson plan using Artstor on JSTOR.

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A bright red portable typewriter designed by Ettore Sottsass, Jr., and Perry A. King, manufactured by Olivetti in 1969. The compact typewriter, known as the Valentine, has a sleek, modern design with black keys and is intended to be lightweight and portable.

Flexible teaching resources for educators

Explore adaptable slide decks, handouts, and LibGuides to enhance your teaching with JSTOR. From research basics to image use in lessons, these resources are ready to be customized for your classroom, with periodic updates to reflect new JSTOR features.

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Close-up of a marbled paper design in blue and cream, featuring diagonal bands of stripes intersected by wavy ribbon-like patterns.

Webinar recording: An introduction to Research on JSTOR

Learn the essentials of JSTOR for teaching and research. Explore primary and secondary sources, use JSTOR’s AI research tool, and support your students with confidence.

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Image credits: 1. Florence Winterflood. Alzheimer’s Disease. n.d. Wellcome Collection. 2. Lois Mailou Jones. Two African Hairstyles. 1982. Visual Arts Legacy Collection. 3. Odra Noel. Apoptosis. n.d. Wellcome Collection. 4. Georges de La Tour. The Fortune-Teller. Probably 1630s. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 5. Ettore Sottsass, Jr. (designer), Perry A. King (designer), and Olivetti Manufacturing Company (manufacturer). Valentine Portable Typewriter and Case. 1969. RISD Museum. 6. Andrea Gottardo Remps. Trompe l’oeil with Paintings and Prints. 17th c. Visual Arts Legacy Collection.