Instructional Video3:21
FuseSchool

BIOLOGY - Genetics - Mitosis

6th - Higher Ed
Mitosis produces identical copies of cells, and is involved in growth, cell repair and asexual reproduction - which is how simple organisms reproduce. When cells divide by mitosis, two new cells form and each cell is identical to one...
Instructional Video5:49
Professor Dave Explains

Mitosis: How One Cell Becomes Two

9th - Higher Ed
We know that we are made of cells. But we start out as just one tiny little cell in the womb. How does that become enough cells to look like a baby? And how does that baby get enough cells to become an adult? The answer is mitosis! This...
Instructional Video4:36
FuseSchool

Understanding Meiosis: The Key to Genetic Diversity

12th - Higher Ed
This video explains the process of meiosis, which is essential for sexual reproduction. It details how cells undergo two rounds of division to produce four genetically diverse sex cells with only half the number of chromosomes. Through...
Instructional Video2:03
Ancient Lights Media

Cell Reproduction Interphase

6th - 8th
Cellular Reproduction Set: 2. This clip introduces the cell life cycle: focus is on the growth (G1-G2) and synthesis(s) stages of interphase.
Instructional Video3:49
Ancient Lights Media

Cell Reproduction Review

6th - 8th
Cellular Reproduction Set: 5. This clip reviews the series of events involved in the reproduction of the cell from interphase through mitosis to cytokinesis.
Instructional Video12:08
Professor Dave Explains

The Cell Cycle and its Regulation

9th - Higher Ed
Your cells have to divide when you're growing, to heal wounds, and to replace dead cells. But how do cells know when to divide and when not to divide? We can't have cells just growing willy-nilly! That's what cancer is, and that's bad....
Instructional Video3:27
FuseSchool

What Is Asexual Reproduction

6th - Higher Ed
Asexual reproduction only needs one parent; all the offspring are clones. This means they are genetically identical to one another and to the parent. Many plants use asexual reproduction, like spider plants. Bacteria also reproduce...
Instructional Video3:20
FuseSchool

What is Mitosis?

6th - Higher Ed
Mitosis produces identical copies of cells, and is involved in growth, cell repair and asexual reproduction - which is how simple organisms reproduce. When cells divide by mitosis, two new cells form and each cell is identical to one...
Instructional Video4:15
Ancient Lights Media

Cell Reproduction Mitosis: the Five Phases

6th - 8th
Cellular Reproduction Set: 3. This clip describes the events of the five phases of mitosis: prophase, pro metaphase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase.
Instructional Video0:54
Visual Learning Systems

Understanding Cell Division

9th - 12th
This video explains the process of cell division, known as mitosis, and how it contributes to the growth of organisms. It highlights that during mitosis, new cells are created from a parent cell, resulting in identical genetic makeup...
Instructional Video2:49
Ancient Lights Media

Sexual Reproduction in Flowering Plants: Fertilization, Seed and Fruit Development

6th - 8th
Plant Reproduction Set: 2. This clip explains the process of double fertilization in flowering plants and looks at seed and fruit development.
Instructional Video5:12
Ancient Lights Media

Meiosis/ The Phases

6th - 8th
Meiosis Set: 2. This clip provides a detailed look at the phases of meiosis and the production of haploid sex cells.
Instructional Video23:29
Wonderscape

Science Kids: All About Cells

K - 5th
Learn all about animal cells and plant cells with new, precise, yet easy-to-understand, definitions and explanations. Students will learn what cells are and why they are important to living things. They will also understand the parts of...
Instructional Video10:48
1
1
Crash Course

Mitosis: Splitting Up is Complicated

9th - 12th Standards
Although you cannot clone yourself, the cells in your body can clone themselves, and, in fact, you wouldn't grow if they didn't! Viewers learn all about this process in a video that explains the difference between the processes of...
Instructional Video11:04
Bozeman Science

Cell Division

9th - 12th Standards
It is hard to believe a 300-foot-tall Redwood tree began as a single cell hundreds of years ago. How did it grow so large? Observe how different kinds of cells (bacteria, sex cells, and eukaryotic cells) reproduce or make more cells...
Instructional Video13:39
2
2
Curated OER

Cell Cycle, Mitosis and Meiosis

7th - 12th
Aren't mitosis and meiosis the same thing? A helpful flow chart demonstrates the difference between mitosis and meiosis on Paul Andersen's Smart Board. Time lapse videos include show mitosis and cytokinesis.
Instructional Video12:11
Khan Academy

Mitosis, Cells, MCAT

10th - 12th
The lecturer starts by emphasizing that the mitotic process is a separate mechanism from cytokinesis—the cytoplasm splitting to become two cells. The video continues by explaining the stages of mitosis in great detail. Each stage is...
Instructional Video3:23
Bite Sci-zed

Longevity and Telomeres

7th - 11th Standards
Why do people age? Scholars explore the concept of telomeres and why they are so important in cells. They learn about the role of telomerase and why it is active in some cells—but not in others. The video also explains why some organisms...
Instructional Video8:00
TED-Ed

How to Biohack Your Cells to Fight Cancer

9th - 12th Standards
Is it possible to use biotechnology to trick your body into fixing cancer-causing mutations? A video presentation discusses both traditional and new technologies that fight cancer. The amazing technologies are sure to intrigue viewers as...
Instructional Video0:26
Howard Hughes Medical Institute

p53

9th - 12th Standards
Regulatory genes play very important roles in cell development. An animated video shows pupils an example of a regulatory gene and how p53 initiates transcription of a gene. The parts of a gene that control regulation are briefly...
Instructional Video0:54
Howard Hughes Medical Institute

X Inactivation

9th - 12th Standards
Have you ever wondered why calico cats have such a colorful coat? The process of X inactivation is an interesting phenomenon in females that drives the physical appearance of individuals. Viewers of an intriguing video connect knowledge...
Instructional Video1:11
Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Angiogenesis

9th - 12th Standards
How do cancer cells grow? With the right resources, the uncontrolled growth of cancer cells into tumors sometimes happens rapidly. The cancer then metastasizes to other areas of the body. The informative video helps scholars discover...
Instructional Video6:21
Veritasium

Amazing Molecular Machines in Your Body

9th - 12th Standards
More than 50 billion cells in your body die every single day. While this sounds traumatic, the human body continuously produces new cells to replace them. A short video shares animations of the process of cell division or mitosis and...
Instructional Video5:10
Amoeba Sisters

Asexual and Sexual Reproduction

7th - 12th Standards
Why do some organisms reproduce sexually, others reproduce asexually, and some both? Biology scholars examine the pros and cons of sexual and asexual reproduction through a short, informative video. The resource offers great examples of...