Instructional Video16:05
TED Talks

TED: An interview with the founders of Black Lives Matter | Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors and Opal Tometi

12th - Higher Ed
Born out of a social media post, the Black Lives Matter movement has sparked discussion about race and inequality across the world. In this spirited conversation with Mia Birdsong, the movement's three founders share what they've learned...
Instructional Video14:09
TED Talks

TED: How Africa can use its traditional knowledge to make progress | Chika ezeanya-esiobu

12th - Higher Ed
Chika ezeanya-esiobu wants to see Africans unleash their suppressed creative and innovative energies by acknowledging the significance of their indigenous, authentic knowledge. In this powerful talk, she shares examples of untapped,...
Instructional Video9:57
SciShow

Top 5 Deadliest Diseases

12th - Higher Ed
Hank scares our pants off with a tale of the five deadliest infectious diseases in the world.
Instructional Video2:33
TED Talks

Marisa Fick-Jordan: The wonder of Zulu wire art

12th - Higher Ed
In this short, image-packed talk, Marisa Fick-Jordan talks about how a village of traditional Zulu wire weavers built a worldwide market for their dazzling work.
Instructional Video10:54
SciShow

The Untold Story of the First Vaccine

12th - Higher Ed
Vaccines save millions of lives each year, so we owe a lot to the people that pioneered that medical breakthrough. But the concept of a vaccine had already existed for a long time before it was “discovered,” and the real story is way...
Instructional Video19:49
TED Talks

Hans Rosling: Let my dataset change your mindset

12th - Higher Ed
Talking at the US State Department this summer, Hans Rosling uses his fascinating data-bubble software to burst myths about the developing world. Look for new analysis on China and the post-bailout world, mixed with classic data shows.
Instructional Video7:57
TED Talks

TED: The funding gap in start-up investing | Temie Giwa-Tubosun

12th - Higher Ed
It is time to close the funding gap for Black female-led start-ups the world over, says entrepreneur Temie Giwa-Tubosun, whose company LifeBank delivers life-saving medical supplies to remote areas in Africa. Today, LifeBank operates...
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow Kids

Into the Forest with Jane Goodall!

K - 5th
Jane Goodall is an amazing scientist and conservationist who has dedicated her life to learning about and protecting chimpanzees! Thanks to her, we've learned that, sometimes, people and animals aren't so different! Learn more about her...
Instructional Video12:58
Crash Course

Decolonization: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
After World War II, Europe was changing radically, and its place in the world was changing as well. European powers had colonized around the world in the 18th and 19th centuries, and in the 20th century, it all came crashing down. Of...
Instructional Video7:09
TED Talks

TED: Africa is a sleeping giant -- I'm trying to wake it up | Adeola Fayehun

12th - Higher Ed
Africa is like a sleeping giant, says journalist and satirist Adeola Fayehun at the beginning of this hilarious, incisive talk. "The truth is I am trying to wake up this giant. That's why I air the dirty laundry of those in charge."...
Instructional Video5:55
TED Talks

William Kamkwamba: How I harnessed the wind

12th - Higher Ed
At age 14, in poverty and famine, a Malawian boy built a windmill to power his family's home. Now at 22, William Kamkwamba, who speaks at TED, here, for the second time, shares in his own words the moving tale of invention that changed...
Instructional Video4:53
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The science of skin color - Angela Koine Flynn

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When ultraviolet sunlight hits our skin, it affects each of us differently. Depending on skin color, it'll take only minutes of exposure to turn one person beetroot-pink, while another requires hours to experience the slightest change....
Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Who built Great Zimbabwe? And why? - Breeanna Elliott

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Stretched across a tree-peppered expanse in Southern Africa lies the ruins of Great Zimbabwe, a medieval stone city of astounding wealth. Located in the present-day country of Zimbabwe, it's the site of the second largest settlement...
Instructional Video15:31
TED Talks

Hans Rosling: The good news of the decade? We're winning the war against child mortality

12th - Higher Ed
Hans Rosling reframes 10 years of UN data with his spectacular visuals, lighting up an astonishing -- and under-reported -- piece of front-page good news: We're winning the war against child death. Along the way, he debunks one flawed...
Instructional Video5:16
TED Talks

Moreangels Mbizah: How community-led conservation can save wildlife

12th - Higher Ed
Conservationist and TED Fellow Moreangels Mbizah studied the famous Cecil the lion until he was shot by a trophy hunter in 2015. She wonders how things could've gone differently, asking: "What if the community that lived next to Cecil...
Instructional Video4:37
SciShow

How Green Energy Could Bring More Rain to Africa

12th - Higher Ed
Africa’s Sahara desert is a prime location, some say, to build arrays of solar panels and wind turbines. But scientists are aware that building these structures can potentially have large-scale effects on the surrounding environment that...
Instructional Video9:58
SciShow

6 Creative Ways People Used to Navigate the Oceans

12th - Higher Ed
People have been exploring the oceans since prehistoric times, way before they had GPS to help them figure out where they were. Here are 6 ingenious ways our ancestors navigated the oceans.
Instructional Video7:56
SciShow

A Brief History of Life: Rise of the Humans

12th - Higher Ed
With the non-avian dinosaurs extinct, it was time for mammals to take over. Finally, in the tiniest sliver of the history of life, humans emerge.
Instructional Video6:33
TED Talks

TED: A new way to help young people with their mental health | Tom Osborn

12th - Higher Ed
TED Fellow Tom Osborn wants more young people to have access to the mental health support they need. With the Shamiri Institute, he and his team are training 18- to 22-year-olds to deliver evidence-based mental health care to their peers...
Instructional Video5:03
TED-Ed

TED-ED: A brief history of alcohol - Rod Phillips

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Nobody knows exactly when humans began to create fermented beverages. The earliest known evidence comes from 7,000 BCE in China, where residue in clay pots has revealed that people were making an alcoholic beverage from fermented rice,...
Instructional Video9:37
Crash Course

Int'l Commerce, Snorkeling Camels, and The Indian Ocean Trade Crash Course World History

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you the history of the Indian Ocean Trade. John weaves a tale of swashbuckling adventure, replete with trade in books, ivory, and timber. Along the way, John manages to cover advances in seafaring technology,...
Instructional Video5:16
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The hidden treasures of Timbuktu | Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
On the edge of the vast Sahara desert, citizens snuck out of the city of Timbuktu and took to the wilderness. They buried chests in the desert sand, hid them in caves, and sealed them in secret rooms. Inside these chests was a treasure...
Instructional Video5:39
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: History's deadliest king | Georges Nzongola-Ntalaja

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1904, Chief Lontulu laid 110 twigs in front of a foreign commission. Every twig represented a person in his village who died because of King Leopold's brutal regime in the Congo. His testimony joined hundreds of others to help bring...
Instructional Video6:46
SciShow

Supersonic Free Fall and the New Element: Hankium?

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings you the news of a newly discovered dinosaur he is kind of afraid to look at, a way to sequence your genome in less time than it takes to get your clothes dry cleaned, & two new adventures that will take place in space - one...