Instructional Video11:25
TED Talks

Unveiling the Self: A Dialogue on Identity, Acting, and Consciousness

12th - Higher Ed
Yara Shahidi and Anil Seth explore the complexities of self-perception and identity, discussing how acting and neuroscience reveal the dynamic and multifaceted nature of the self. Shahidi reflects on how embodying characters deepens her...
Instructional Video2:56
MinuteEarth

How Birds Fooled Military Radar: A Technology Turned Conservation Tool

12th - Higher Ed
A technology to ignore birds on radar ended up being useful to study and conserve them.
Instructional Video2:28
MinuteEarth

Why is it Hot Underground?

12th - Higher Ed
Why is it Hot Underground
Instructional Video2:20
MinuteEarth

Plate Tectonics Explained

12th - Higher Ed
Plate Tectonics Explained
Instructional Video9:45
TED Talks

TED: The difference between false empathy and true support | Chezare A. Warren

12th - Higher Ed
There's a right way and wrong way to do empathy, says author and scholar Chezare A. Warren. So how do we get it right? He unpacks the source of false empathy and explains the key shift in perspective we need to build healthy...
Instructional Video5:33
TED Talks

TED: Want to truly succeed? Lift others up while you climb | Amber Hikes

12th - Higher Ed
It's up to all of us to create a more inclusive and diverse workplace. No matter where you are in your career journey, it's essential that you help others grow, even as you are growing yourself, says ACLU Chief Equity Officer Amber...
News Clip6:20
PBS

How Maternal Stress Can Affect Health of Unborn Children

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers are trying to better understand the biology of stress and its impact on child health. Now, data suggests those connections may form as early as the womb, with studies indicating frequent and prolonged adversity for pregnant...
Instructional Video7:22
TED Talks

TED: How poop turns into forests | Ludmila Rattis

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know the world's largest tropical forest is partly formed by seeds emerging from poop? Ecologist Ludmila Rattis reveals the surprisingly fruitful benefits of letting nature take care of its own business, sharing how the digestive...
Instructional Video3:31
MinutePhysics

How Do Bikes Stay Up?

12th - Higher Ed
Learn the about the physics that allows bikes to stay upright and in motion, even without a rider.
Instructional Video6:28
SciShow

The Hallucinogenic Fungi That May Treat Alzheimer’s

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever heard of ergot fungi, you've likely heard of the nasty side effects of eating them, including convulsions and hallucinations. But like many a toxic substance, scientists have figured out ways to use ergot for good....
Instructional Video12:26
TED Talks

TED: A cleaner world could start in a rice field | Jim Whitaker and Jessica Whitaker Allen

12th - Higher Ed
Rice is the world's largest food source — and it's also a massive emitter of methane gas, a key contributor to climate change. Fifth-generation rice farmer Jim Whitaker and his daughter, farmer and conservationist Jessica Whitaker Allen,...
Instructional Video4:23
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Do mosquitos actually bite some people more than others? | Maria Elena De Obaldia

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Some swear they're cursed to be hunted by mosquitos while their close-by companions are regularly left unscathed. Are mosquitos really attracted to some people more than others? And if so, is there anything we can do about it? Maria...
Instructional Video2:28
MinuteEarth

Mushroom Wars

12th - Higher Ed
Two mushroom guilds with vastly different strategies are locked in competition for forest dominance.
Instructional Video5:41
SciShow

Unexpected Ways Scientists Use GPS

12th - Higher Ed
GPS devices aren't just for keeping you from driving into a lake. They're also helping lots of scientists in unexpected ways.
Instructional Video21:02
SciShow

How Climate Change Affects Ocean Life | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
We can see the effects of the climate crisis in many different ways here on land. But the oceans are also part of the interconnected, global system. So, here are a few ways that climate change affects our oceanic buddies.
News Clip9:09
PBS

How Phoenix became the most autism-friendly city in the world

12th - Higher Ed
Matt Resnik has helped changed the face of autism in his hometown. When he was diagnosed as a child, his parents poured their hearts into getting him therapy, even launching an organization, in hopes he would outgrow his challenges and...
News Clip8:13
PBS

Goldman Sachs Part I

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Solman examines the inner workings of investment powerhouse Goldman Sachs and how it makes money. ( Part 1)
News Clip6:11
PBS

Scarred by war, Yemen's children carry burdens beyond their years

12th - Higher Ed
In Yemen, some of the most vulnerable victims are the 2 million children on the brink of starvation, or those who lost limbs during the fighting. In Aden, many children have been fit with prosthetic limbs, but with rudimentary materials...
News Clip6:08
PBS

A public housing project where healthy living is the foundation

12th - Higher Ed
In downtown Denver, a recently built public housing project is designed to foster healthy living, with access to nutritious food, access to doctors and ease of exercise. Jeffrey Brown reports.
News Clip7:29
PBS

Landscape photographer races to finish decades of work

12th - Higher Ed
Oregon photographer Christopher Burkett is best known for producing large-format film prints of American landscapes, some of the highest resolution color photographs ever created without computer technology. But he only has a limited...
News Clip6:28
PBS

Rebuilding a Chicago neighborhood thru connections to Muslim community

12th - Higher Ed
The South Side of Chicago has long been plagued with some of the highest crime rates in the nation, but a man of faith is trying to transform the area by focusing on the everyday needs of those who live there. Jeffrey Brown visits the...
News Clip5:45
PBS

Violence and instability lead to widespread hunger across Chad

12th - Higher Ed
Government forces in the capital of Chad killed dozens of opposition protesters Thursday. Rights groups say the unarmed civilians were massacred as they protested having to wait two years for elections. People there are also suffering...
News Clip9:18
PBS

Giving vulnerable residents help before mental health issues land them in jail

12th - Higher Ed
Each year, an estimated 2 million people suffering from mental illness are booked into county jails. In Kansas City, Missouri, like other places around the country, officials are looking for a better way to get those people the help they...
Instructional Video11:18
SciShow

4 Ways Humans Are Still Evolving

12th - Higher Ed
When we think about evolution, we typically think about big changes that happened long ago, but we humans are still evolving!