Instructional Video9:34
Schooling Online

Destroying Drama: Arthur Miller, The Crucible - Plot Summary

3rd - Higher Ed
Let’s travel back in time to the small town of Salem where religion (and rumours) run the show. What happens when you mix accusations of witchcraft, town rivalries and an adulterous relationship? You get an uncontrollable spread of...
Instructional Video0:44
Next Animation Studio

Illnesses you could get from exposure to flood water from Hurricane Florence

12th - Higher Ed
Members of the public are at risk of catching illnesses from the flood water left behind by Hurricane Florence.
Instructional Video1:08
Next Animation Studio

Microwave weapons ‘were probably used’ against US diplomats

12th - Higher Ed
A new report by a US National Academy of Sciences committee has found that “directed” microwave radiation is the likely cause of illnesses among American diplomats in Cuba and China.
Instructional Video6:35
Let's Tute

Understanding the Link Between Disease and Human Health

9th - Higher Ed
The video discusses the link between disease and human health, defining and classifying diseases into categories based on onset, transmission, and duration. It also highlights the importance of adopting a healthy lifestyle to prevent...
Instructional Video6:27
Barcroft Media

The Teen Who Dies If He Falls Asleep | BORN DIFFERENT

Higher Ed
A TEENAGER who suffers from an extremely rare condition means if he falls asleep unassisted - he dies. Liam Derbyshire was born with Ondine's Curse, officially known as Congenital Central Hypoventilation Syndrome, which causes...
Instructional Video1:39
Encyclopaedia Britannica

Did You Know? Helen Keller

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Learn more about the life and accomplishments of Helen Keller.
Instructional Video2:37
Curated Video

Museum of Artifacts That Made America: Helen Keller's Watch

K - 5th
Deafblind pioneer Helen Keller campaigned for a better America – with the help of a remarkable watch that she didn’t have to see to read.
Instructional Video6:48
Healthcare Triage

The Caregiver Gap

Higher Ed
The US healthcare system has a huge gap. A lot of care giving isn't covered, and it falls on families and friends to pick up the slack. It can take a lot of time and help to make it through an illness, and there isn't much coverage for...
Instructional Video11:25
Weird History

When The Sleeping Sickness Hit NYC In the 20s

12th - Higher Ed
Medical science has come a long way in the last hundred years, but that doesn't mean every medical mystery has been solved. The cause of the mysterious sleeping sickness that struck New York in the 1920s, Encephalitis lethargica, remains...
Instructional Video2:18
Curated Video

Elizabeth Keckly: From Slavery to the White House

9th - Higher Ed
She was enslaved at birth – but became the first lady’s favorite dressmaker and the author of a sensational memoir that shocked the nation. So who was Elizabeth Keckly?
Instructional Video8:50
Professor Dave Explains

Bacterial Infections in Humans

12th - Higher Ed
Now we know about a wide variety of bacteria, as well as precisely how they can harm us. So how do they get spread around? How do communicable diseases get from host to host? Let's learn all about this process now.
Instructional Video3:30
Curated Video

Understanding Correlation vs Causation: Linking and Lurking Variables

K - 5th
In this video, the teacher explains the difference between correlation and causation by discussing the role of linking and lurking variables. They provide examples to illustrate how two variables can be correlated without one causing the...
Instructional Video3:00
Curated Video

The Common Cold: Causes, Symptoms, and Remedies

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This video provides an informative overview of the common cold, its symptoms, causes, and prevention. It highlights the fact that the common cold is a viral infection that affects the upper respiratory tract and is really common in...
Instructional Video7:22
History Hit

Lucy Worsley on The Death of Jane Austen: Jane Austen's bedroom

12th - Higher Ed
What was her relationship with her sister Cassandra like? Was Cassandra a great writer or did Jane have natural talent? Did her mother and sister disapprove of her writing? Lucy Worsley on The Death of Jane Austen, Part 3
Instructional Video2:19
Curated Video

Pandemic Lockdown of 1918

9th - Higher Ed
The Spanish Flu was one of the deadliest pandemics the world has ever seen – so how was one sleepy Colorado town able to escape unscathed?
Instructional Video3:01
Healthcare Triage

Yellow Fever, Theranos, and Low Nicotine Cigarettes

Higher Ed
On this Healthcare Triage News, we're talking about an outbreak of Yellow Fever in South America, and why there aren't enough doses of the highly effective vaccine on the market. We'll also look at developments in the huge and...
Instructional Video12:12
Weird History

The Most Destructive Pandemics In History

12th - Higher Ed
The world is swarming with deadly pandemics, epidemics, diseases, and the history of humanity can certainly attest to this fact. There have been many instances spanning our existence of historic epidemics that threatened humanity.
Instructional Video1:59
60 Second Histories

Galen and Hippocrates

K - 5th
In this short video, Galen talks about Hippocrates and his theories
Instructional Video8:06
Barcroft Media

I Hid My Eating Disorder For 8 Years

Higher Ed
A 28-YEAR-OLD woman, whose weight dropped to 88lbs at the height of her eating disorders, is publicising her story to show other sufferers that recovery is possible. Lindsey Hall, from Fort Worth, Texas, says her eating disorders first...
Instructional Video2:31
FuseSchool

What Are Vaccinations?

6th - Higher Ed
Vaccinations protect both humans and animals from a wide range of preventable and potentially serious illnesses. With vaccines, we take advantage of one of the most important aspects of the immune system: the ability to develop...
Instructional Video3:39
FuseSchool

Bacterial Disease

6th - Higher Ed
Did you know that it wasn’t until around 200 years ago that people knew what caused infectious diseases? Before that, they believed that one cause was ‘bad air’, and so they carried around bunches of sweet-smelling flowers to sweeten the...
Instructional Video4:26
Cerebellum

The Human Body Major Systems & Organs - The Immune System And Lymphatic System

9th - 12th
The human body is a wondrously complex machine made of flesh, bone, muscles, organs, blood vessels and highly specialized systems that function together to sustain life. This fascinating third part of The Human Body series examines the...
Instructional Video13:25
Weird History

A Day In the Life Living With the Plague

12th - Higher Ed
The Black Death changed the world. As the most profound epidemic in human history, the plague claimed the lives of millions, with nearly half of Europe's population perishing from the disease. Some feared they were living through the...
Instructional Video2:38
Octopus TV

Eating Disorders - Isolation

Higher Ed
In this video Janet Treasure discusses approaches to coping with and support those suffering from eating disorders.