Instructional Video4:17
Curated Video

GCSE Physics - Development of the model of the atom #31

9th - Higher Ed
This video covers: - Democritus - Atomic Theory - John Dalton - Solid spheres - JJ Thompson - Plumb Pudding model - Ernest Rutherford - Nuclear Model - Niels Bohr - Electron shells - James Chadwick - Neutrons General info: - Suitable for...
Instructional Video3:55
Curated Video

GCSE Chemistry - Nanoparticles #22

9th - Higher Ed
This video covers: - What nanoparticles are and why they're useful - The uses of nanoparticles e.g. as catalysts, in nano-medicine, and in electrical circuits - The risks of nanoparticles - How silver particles are used in suncreams and...
Instructional Video4:15
Curated Video

GCSE Chemistry - History of the Model of the Atom #7

9th - Higher Ed
This video covers: - Democritus - Atomic Theory - John Dalton - Solid spheres - JJ Thomson - Plumb Pudding model - Ernest Rutherford - Nuclear Model - Niels Bohr - Electron shells - James Chadwick - Neutrons General info: - Suitable for...
Instructional Video5:29
Curated Video

Fossils Are Amazing

3rd - Higher Ed
Dr. Forrester explains what fossils are, how they are formed, and what information they provide. She will also be conducting an experiment using fossils.
Instructional Video5:13
Curated Video

Persuasive Writing 1

3rd - Higher Ed
Persuasive Writing explains the purpose of persuasive writing and lists examples of focused, specific topics for persuasive writing.
Instructional Video5:48
Curated Video

Author’s Argument

3rd - Higher Ed
Author’s Argument identifies the author’s argument and specific claims in a text, and recognizes the author’s evidence that supports the argument.
Instructional Video2:18
Curated Video

Rule of Law

9th - Higher Ed
U.S. Citizens are required to follow the rule of law, a practice that was tested by former president Richard Nixon.
Instructional Video2:15
Curated Video

Congressional Investigations

9th - Higher Ed
Congressional Investigations have uncovered some serious wrongdoing over the past 200 years. But where does Congress get the power to conduct investigations and how has it used that power throughout U.S. history?
Instructional Video2:08
The Business Professor

Prima Facie

Higher Ed
Prima facie is a Latin expression meaning at first sight or based on first impression. The literal translation would be 'at first face' or 'at first appearance', from the feminine forms of primus and facies, both in the ablative case.
Instructional Video3:28
The Business Professor

Inductive Message - Communication

Higher Ed
What are Inductive Messages? ... The inductive method of communicating involves providing evidence or anecdotes that lead an individual to a logical conclusion.
Instructional Video4:33
The Business Professor

Arguments - Persuasive Communications

Higher Ed
Persuasive writing is a form of written communication intended to convince or influence readers to accept a particular idea or opinion and to inspire action.
Instructional Video7:19
Curated Video

Pandemic Perspectives: The Nature of Research

12th - Higher Ed
SCIENCE, ONGOING: Professor Barwich talks about how the pandemic has highlighted the need to teach people science as a process as well as the actual concepts of science to increase democratic participation and how the pandemic showed the...
Instructional Video5:41
Curated Video

Pandemic Perspectives: The Importance of Communication

12th - Higher Ed
VITAL ENGAGEMENT: Dr Holt talks about how the greatest lesson from the COVID-19 pandemic is that to battle a pandemic the public must feel that they have a buy-in to the process that gives rise to the decisions to wear masks, take...
Instructional Video7:00
Curated Video

How to Change Your Self Defeating Beliefs

Higher Ed
This is a follow up to a previous video on identifying your self-defeating thoughts. Challenging your thoughts is called cognitive restructuring and is a technique used in cognitive behavior therapy. You can do this on your own, but of...
Instructional Video6:12
The Guardian

Do cyclists think they're above the law, and does it even matter

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Cyclists can be a nuisance, running red lights, riding on the pavement ... but are they dangerous, and if not, is it a problem if they break the law? Peter Wallker, Guardian journalist and author of Bike Nation: How Cycling Can Save the...
Instructional Video7:28
Curated Video

What is Delusional disorder? How Is It Different From Schizophrenia?

Higher Ed
Delusional disorder is very different from schizophrenia. The only thing they have in common is the presence of delusions. Schizophrenia is delusions, plus hallucinations, disorganized thoughts and behavior and other cognitive or...
Instructional Video6:35
Curated Video

Supporting the Main Idea –Informational

3rd - Higher Ed
Supporting the Main Idea –Informational analyzes informational text by showing how paraphrasing and quotes support the main idea.
Instructional Video7:37
Curated Video

CBD For Anxiety?

Higher Ed
CBD or cannabidiol has become a popular go to drug to use for a variety of problems. There’s only one FDA approved CBD prescription medication – Epidiolex. It’s approved for a specific kind of seizure disorder. But you can get CBD...
Instructional Video4:28
Mr. Beat

Why the Principal Can Search Your Purse | New Jersey v. T. L. O.

6th - 12th
In episode 52 of Supreme Court Briefs, two students get caught smoking in the high school restroom, and one denies it, so the principal searches her purse.
Instructional Video4:01
Mr. Beat

Can the Police Take Your DNA? | Maryland v. King

6th - 12th
In episode 38 of Supreme Court Briefs, a man is arrested and a sample of his DNA is taken and put into a database. The DNA sample comes back months later to reveal it matched the DNA in a rape case and he is charged with the rape. Wait a...
Instructional Video7:09
Mr. Beat

When the Supreme Court Justified Japanese Internment Camps | Korematsu v. United States

6th - 12th
In episode 36 of Supreme Court Briefs, after the United States government forces Japanese American citizens into relocation centers during World War II, one man refuses and gets himself into some big trouble.
Instructional Video5:40
Mr. Beat

Can the Police Use Evidence They Got Illegally? | Mapp v. Ohio

6th - 12th
In episode 32 of Supreme Court Briefs, police break into a home of a citizen and later charge her with having sexually explicit material.
Instructional Video4:27
Mr. Beat

Can Recorded Testimony Be Used in Court? | Crawford v. Washington

6th - 12th
In episode 25 of Supreme Court Briefs, a man stabs another man, but calls it self-defense. However, the only witness can't testify in court, so they use her recorded police interrogation instead. Wait a second, CAN THEY DO THAT?!?
Instructional Video17:35
Mr. Beat

What Was Watergate?

6th - 12th
Mr. Beat explains the Watergate scandal.