Instructional Video9:30
Crash Course

German Expressionism: Crash Course Film History

12th - Higher Ed
We've spent a lot of time focusing on France and the U.S. as that's where a significant amount of both infrastructure and business models were initially set up for film. But there were other countries adding their own stories to the...
Instructional Video16:42
TED Talks

Gordon Brown: Wiring a web for global good

12th - Higher Ed
We're at a unique moment in history, says UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown: we can use today's interconnectedness to develop our shared global ethic -- and work together to confront the challenges of poverty, security, climate change and...
Instructional Video18:43
TED Talks

TED: Is war between China and the US inevitable? | Graham Allison

12th - Higher Ed
Taking lessons from a historical pattern called "Thucydides's Trap," political scientist Graham Allison shows why a rising China and a dominant United States could be headed towards a violent collision no one wants -- and how we can...
Instructional Video17:22
TED Talks

TED: Why Brexit happened -- and what to do next | Alexander Betts

12th - Higher Ed
We are embarrassingly unaware of how divided our societies are, and Brexit grew out of a deep, unexamined divide between those that fear globalization and those that embrace it, says social scientist Alexander Betts. How do we now...
Instructional Video5:21
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The imaginary king who changed the real world

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1165, copies of a strange letter began to circulate throughout Europe. It spoke of a fantastical realm, containing the Tower of Babel and the Fountain of Youth— all ruled over by the letter’s mysterious author: Prester John. Who was...
Instructional Video4:02
SciShow

The World's Bird Poop Obsession

12th - Higher Ed
Here's something to think about the next time you clean your windshield.
Instructional Video13:41
Crash Course

The Northern Renaissance: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
The European Renaissance may have started in Florence, but it pretty quickly moved out of Italy and spread the art, architecture, literature, and humanism across Europe to places like France, Spain, England, and the Low Countries....
Instructional Video11:37
Crash Course

Cathedrals and Universities: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
Until roughly 1100, there were relatively few places of knowledge-making. Monasteries and abbeys had special rooms called scriptoria where monks copied manuscripts by hand. But the biggest places where knowledge was made were the Gothic...
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

Milk and the Mutants That Love It

12th - Higher Ed
Got milk? Fact is, most people don't -- and shouldn't -- because for them, ice cream and milkshakes are basically toxic. So why can some people drink milk and survive? Turns out they're mutants! SciShow explains.
Instructional Video20:02
TED Talks

George Papandreou: Imagine a European democracy without borders

12th - Higher Ed
Greece has been the poster child for European economic crisis, but former Prime Minister George Papandreou wonders if it's just a preview of what's to come. “Our democracies," he says, "are trapped by systems that are too big to fail, or...
Instructional Video4:17
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The evolution of the book - Julie Dreyfuss

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What makes a book a book? Is it just anything that stores and communicates information? Or does it have to do with paper, binding, font, ink, its weight in your hands, the smell of the pages? To answer these questions, Julie Dreyfuss...
Instructional Video4:38
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What was so special about Viking ships? - Jan Bill

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As the Roman Empire flourished, Scandinavians had small settlements and no central government. Yet by the 11th century, they had spread far from Scandinavia, gaining control of trade routes throughout Europe, conquering kingdoms as far...
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

3 Ways Humans Have Literally Put Themselves Into Art

12th - Higher Ed
Artists are notorious for pouring their heart and soul into their work, but historically, they also put some of their literal body parts into it as well!
Instructional Video19:34
TED Talks

Hubertus Knabe: The dark secrets of a surveillance state

12th - Higher Ed
Tour the deep dark world of the East German state security agency known as Stasi. Uniquely powerful at spying on its citizens, until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 the Stasi masterminded a system of surveillance and psychological...
Instructional Video18:16
TED Talks

TED: How we wrecked the ocean | Jeremy Jackson

12th - Higher Ed
In this bracing talk, coral reef ecologist Jeremy Jackson lays out the shocking state of the ocean today: overfished, overheated, polluted, with indicators that things will get much worse. Astonishing photos and stats make the case.
Instructional Video13:10
Crash Course

The 17th Century Crisis: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
The 17th Century in Europe was pretty rough in a lot of ways. The Thirty Years War involved a lot of countries, and a lot of battles, and it was terrible for everyone involved, as wars have aa historical tendency to be. At the same time,...
Instructional Video5:52
SciShow

News | Where Did Domesticated Horses Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
New information has helped us understand where domestic horses came from. And by counting some tree rings, researchers were able to find evidence of Norse presence in the Americas in 1021 CE.
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Doggerland: A Real-Life Atlantis

12th - Higher Ed
Though we probably won’t find a literal Atlantis beneath the sea, that doesn’t mean that a human settlement hasn’t ever been lost to the water. Meet Doggerland.
Instructional Video5:58
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Big Data - Tim Smith

Pre-K - Higher Ed
There is a mind-boggling amount of data floating around our society. Physicists at CERN have been pondering how to store and share their ever more massive data for decades - stimulating globalization of the internet along the way, whilst...
Instructional Video13:35
Crash Course

The Soviet Bloc Unwinds: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
In the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s, protests and unrest continued continued across Europe, and the Soviet Union was having increasing trouble holding its sphere of influence together. Today you'll learn about the labor strikes of...
Instructional Video13:00
TED Talks

Wajahat Ali: The case for having kids

12th - Higher Ed
The global fertility rate, or the number of children per woman, has halved over the last 50 years. What will having fewer babies mean for the future of humanity? In this funny, eye-opening talk, journalist (and self-described exhausted...
Instructional Video6:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: History vs. Genghis Khan - Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
He was one of the most fearsome warlords who ever lived, waging an unstoppable conquest across the Eurasian continent. But was Genghis Khan a vicious barbarian or a unifier who paved the way for the modern world? Alex Gendler puts this...
Instructional Video13:36
Crash Course

Migration: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
Between 1840 and 1914, an estimated 40 million people left Europe. This is one of the most significant migrations in human history. So, who was leaving Europe? And why? Crash Course is on Patreon! You can support us directly by signing...
Instructional Video19:51
TED Talks

TED: Capitalism will eat democracy -- unless we speak up | Yanis Varoufakis

12th - Higher Ed
Have you wondered why politicians aren't what they used to be, why governments seem unable to solve real problems? economist Yanis Varoufakis, the former Minister of Finance for Greece, says that it's because you can be in politics today...