If you are trying to aid in your children's education and are running out of ideas perhaps you can ask NASA for help.  You might not get Cape Canaveral on the line but at least you can use their 140,000 media library completely copyright free. 

Create a home space adventure with a green table cloth and your imagination.  Mount Royal University's Duane Bratt Ph.D. is a political science Professor and Chair in the Department of Economics, Justice, and Policy Studies can understand why they would give access to these extremely rare photos, "We are seeing in the United States renewed interest in space. Discussions about going to Mars, going back to the moon, President Trump's Space Force, and this is a way, I think to generate some excitement that we haven't seen since the 1970s."

Dr. Bratt explains that the decision was probably a move based on a cost-benefit study of the commercial value of the usage rights for the photos, or the media benefit and social recognition of having their photos used by the everyman. 

After all, no one is going to look at some social media personality, and believe that they got that shot of the earth without the assistance of NASA.  Dr. Bratt believes that this will only enhance your child's ability to grasp the great vastness of the universe, "It is also a way of going after the younger audience and getting kids interested in science. If you are looking for a curriculum this would help. If you are looking for a curriculum that excites your kids this helps, you know visualization."

Without the push for technology and the ability to dream we can't ask for a better teacher than NASA and science is one of the key subject teachers are still promoting while school is out.  This is a unique opportunity to use your free time, and family to make something really out of this world.

https://www.nasa.gov/multimedia/imagegallery/index.html