Instructional Video11:36
TED Talks

Can salad dressing transform capitalism? | Alex Amouyel

12th - Higher Ed
What if businesses were designed to maximize impact — not just profits? Alex Amouyel, president and CEO of Newman's Own Foundation, details the organization’s commitment to donate all of the profits from the food company it owns — and...
Instructional Video7:59
TED Talks

TED: Fight for justice — even if you don't live to see it | Golriz Lucina

12th - Higher Ed
Storyteller Golriz Lucina recounts how the historic sacrifice of Iranian 19th-century poet and mystic Táhirih planted the seeds for the "Woman, Life, Freedom" protests today, offering an inspiring lesson in the value of acting with...
Instructional Video14:28
TED Talks

TED: Let's reframe cancel culture | Sarah Jones

12th - Higher Ed
Cancel culture launched a reckoning that was long overdue — but that doesn't mean it's getting everything right. Filmmaker and actor Sarah Jones slips in and out of various characters as she shares her personal experience with cancel...
Instructional Video14:25
TED Talks

TED: The ordinary people doing extraordinary things in Ukraine | Oleksandra Matviichuk

12th - Higher Ed
How do we defend people's freedom and dignity against authoritarianism, when the "law of war" doesn't seem to apply anymore? In the face of the Russian occupation of Ukraine, human rights lawyer and Nobel laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk...
Instructional Video9:12
TED Talks

TED: Unions for climate action! | Payton M. Wilkins

12th - Higher Ed
In the long term, shutting down a coal mine means cleaner air and a healthier environment — but in the short term, it can devastate a community or family that relied on the mine's paychecks to make ends meet. Environmental justice...
Instructional Video6:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What caused the Rwandan Genocide? | Susanne Buckley-Zistel

Pre-K - Higher Ed
For one hundred days in 1994, the African country of Rwanda suffered a horrific campaign of mass murder. Neighbor turned against neighbor as violence engulfed the region, resulting in the deaths of over one-tenth of the country's...
News Clip6:34
PBS

With new book on political divisiveness, former GOP official rings an 'alarm bell'

12th - Higher Ed
Peter Wehner served in three Republican White Houses. Now, he's written a book about the current state of national political discourse. In “The Death of Politics,” Wehner analyzes the tone and rhetoric used by President Trump, and how...
News Clip9:54
PBS

How Retired Supreme Court Justice Stevens Would Amend the Constitution (April 21, 2014)

12th - Higher Ed
Former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens talks to Judy Woodruff about his new book, "Six Amendments: How and Why We Should Change the Constitution." In his book, the 94-year-old liberal justice calls for major changes to the...
News Clip8:38
PBS

Claudia Rankine: Poetry and Racism

12th - Higher Ed
Poet and playwright Claudia Rankine says that the small moments that carve gaps of misunderstanding between Americans lead to big, national moments of misunderstanding, like events in Ferguson and New York. Rankine explores these...
News Clip7:33
PBS

Uneasy Peace Takes Hold In Contested Region Of Azerbaijan

12th - Higher Ed
Ethnic-Armenian forces last week handed over two regions to Azerbaijani control as part of Russia-brokered armistice that ended the six-week war over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Moscow has sent peacekeepers to the ethnic-Armenian...
News Clip7:31
PBS

Inside The ‘Extraordinary’ Campaign To Put Brett Kavanaugh On The Supreme Court

12th - Higher Ed
President Trump's nomination of federal judge Brett Kavanaugh to the Supreme Court in 2018 launched a bitter partisan fight that grew even more polarized when Christine Blasey Ford said Kavanaugh had sexually assaulted her in high...
News Clip5:02
PBS

Lynne Cheney On American Presidents Of 'The Virginia Dynasty'

12th - Higher Ed
Four of America’s first five presidents were born and raised within a 60-mile radius in the state of Virginia. Those men -- George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and James Monroe -- and their sometimes complicated...
Instructional Video7:44
Crash Course

Legal System Basics: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
This week Craig Benzine takes a first look at the judicial branch. It's pretty easy to forget that the courts, and the laws that come out of them, affect our lives on a daily basis. But how exactly these decisions are made and where each...
Instructional Video6:34
Crash Course

Judicial Decisions: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
Today, Craig Benzine is going to dive into the factors that influence judicial decisions. As you may have noticed, the Supreme Court recently handed down some pretty big decisions on same-sex marriage (in Obergefell v Hodges) and the...
Instructional Video7:37
Crash Course

Sex Discrimination: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
Today, Craig is going to talk about employment discrimination, and we're going to focus primarily on women in the workforce. Discrimination against women tends to be handled somewhat differently in the courts as they are not a minority....
Instructional Video7:42
Crash Course

Congressional Leadership: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
This week Craig Benzine explores the leadership structure of congress. We’ll break out the clone machine to examine the responsibilities of the speaker of the house, the majority and minority leaders as well as the majority and minority...
Instructional Video8:54
Crash Course

How Presidents Govern: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
This week Craig Benzine talks about how the president gets things done. Filling the role of the executive branch is a pretty big job - much too big for just one person. It's so big that the president employs an entire federal...
Instructional Video16:12
TED Talks

TED: How to win an argument (at the US Supreme Court, or anywhere) | Neal Katyal

12th - Higher Ed
The secret to winning an argument isn't grand rhetoric or elegant style, says US Supreme Court litigator Neal Katyal -- it takes more than that. With stories of some of the most impactful cases he's argued before the Court, Katyal shows...
Instructional Video6:24
Crash Course

Supreme Court of the United States Procedures: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
This week Craig Benzine talks about what happens when a case makes it to the Supreme Court of the United States (or the SCOTUS). We're going to focus on court procedure today. We talk about how to petition to get your case heard, how...
Instructional Video5:45
Crash Course

Congressional Delegation: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
In which Craig Benzine teaches you about delegation, and informal powers. What are all these federal agencies about? Well, the president has a lot of stuff to do as the chief executive, and as much as Americans like to talk about...
Instructional Video16:16
TED Talks

TED: The legacy of racial injustice in the US criminal legal system | Nick Turner and Whitney Pennington Rodgers

12th - Higher Ed
In an engaging, insightful conversation, criminal justice reformer Nick Turner breaks down the ways the US criminal legal system perpetuates centuries-old racial and economic inequality. He joins TED current affairs curator Whitney...
Instructional Video10:34
SciShow

5 Psychology Experiments You Couldn't Do Today

12th - Higher Ed
In the past, some experiments were run in scary and unethical ways. From using children to unknowing subjects, these five experiments left people affected for the rest of their lives.
Instructional Video16:52
TED Talks

TED: The end of Roe v. Wade -- and what comes next | Kathryn Kolbert

12th - Higher Ed
Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 Supreme Court decision protecting people's right to have an abortion in the United States, will be overturned within a year, says reproductive rights attorney Kathryn Kolbert. In this electrifying call to...
Instructional Video10:16
TED Talks

TED: The new urgency of climate change | Al Gore

12th - Higher Ed
The coronavirus brought much of the world to a standstill, dropping carbon emissions by five percent. Al Gore says keeping those rates down is now up to us. In this illuminating interview, he discusses how the steadily declining cost of...