Instructional Video6:34
Be Smart

Zombie Parasites!

12th - Higher Ed
Shows like The Walking Dead are full of hungry, mindless, surprisingly fleet-footed armies of brain-eating zombies. Could they actually exist? Are zombies real? Well, maybe if you're talking about zom-bees! This week I introduce you to...
Instructional Video15:54
TED Talks

TED: The surprising science of alpha males | Frans de Waal

12th - Higher Ed
In this fascinating look at the "alpha male," primatologist Frans de Waal explores the privileges and costs of power while drawing surprising parallels between how humans and primates choose their leaders. His research reveals some of...
Instructional Video11:16
TED Talks

TED: How a blind astronomer found a way to hear the stars | Wanda Diaz Merced

12th - Higher Ed
Wanda Diaz Merced studies the light emitted by gamma-ray bursts, the most energetic events in the universe. When she lost her sight and was left without a way to do her science, she had a revelatory insight: the light curves she could no...
Instructional Video7:06
PBS

Are Space and Time An Illusion?

12th - Higher Ed
This episode of Space Time is actually about Spacetime, so pull up a chair, grab your favorite snack, and buckle up, because this episode is going to be a TRIP. Gabe explores what reality is, what "time" is, and why what you think those...
Instructional Video16:05
TED Talks

Eric Sanderson: New York -- before the City

12th - Higher Ed
400 years after Hudson found New York harbor, Eric Sanderson shares how he made a 3D map of Mannahatta's fascinating pre-city ecology of hills, rivers, wildlife -- accurate down to the block -- when Times Square was a wetland and you...
Instructional Video17:00
TED Talks

James Cameron: Before Avatar ... a curious boy

12th - Higher Ed
James Cameron's big-budget (and even bigger-grossing) films create unreal worlds all their own. In this personal talk, he reveals his childhood fascination with the fantastic -- from reading science fiction to deep-sea diving -- and how...
Instructional Video5:33
TED Talks

TED: Lessons on leaving the world better than you found it | Sophie Howe

12th - Higher Ed
Sophie Howe is the world's only future generations commissioner, a new kind of government official tasked with advocating for the interests of generations to come and holding public institutions accountable for delivering long-term...
Instructional Video10:17
Bozeman Science

Practice 7 - Engaging in Argument from Evidence

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains the importance of argumentation in improving both understanding and design. This video begins with a discussion of the heliocentric and geocentric model of the Universe that eventually lead to the Copernican...
Instructional Video5:20
SciShow

Symbioses Are Way More Complex Than You Think!

12th - Higher Ed
When we hear the term symbiosis, we tend to think about a simple partnership between two biological organisms. But in many cases, there are more than two parties involved and it's way more complicated.
Instructional Video4:11
Curated Video

This Land Is Your Land - Project For Awesome 2016

12th - Higher Ed
About the importance of the National Parks Foundation.
Instructional Video3:02
SciShow

These Beetles Are Bright and Shiny… For Camouflage

12th - Higher Ed
Jewel beetles are pretty eye-catching with their glossy, bright coloration. But if you were a small creature that needed to avoid predators, you might think that eye-catching is the last thing you'd want to be. But it turns out that...
Instructional Video13:56
TED Talks

TED: How we can make crops survive without water | Jill Farrant

12th - Higher Ed
As the world's population grows and the effects of climate change come into sharper relief, we'll have to feed more people using less arable land. Molecular biologist Jill Farrant studies a rare phenomenon that may help: "resurrection...
Instructional Video11:23
Bozeman Science

Selection

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains the importance of selection in biology. Artificial selection occurs when humans choose traits that will be selected for or against. This has created the variety of domesticated animals and crops. He then describes...
Instructional Video15:19
TED Talks

TED: The long reach of reason | Steven Pinker and Rebecca Newberger Goldstein

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. Here's a TED first: an animated Socratic dialog! In a time when irrationality seems to rule both politics and...
Instructional Video27:20
TED Talks

TED: What separates us from chimpanzees? | Jane Goodall

12th - Higher Ed
Jane Goodall hasn't found the missing link, but she's come closer than nearly anyone else. The primatologist says the only real difference between humans and chimps is our sophisticated language. She urges us to start using it to change...
Instructional Video6:30
SciShow

The Second-Ever Case of Full HIV Remission | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
There’s still a lot of work to be done before HIV is cured, but this week scientists reported the second-ever case of full HIV remission in a patient.
Instructional Video4:56
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Jean-Baptiste P. Koehl: Why are earthquakes so hard to predict?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 132 CE, Zhang Heng presented his latest invention: a large vase he claimed could tell them whenever an earthquake occurred for hundreds of miles. Today, we no longer rely on pots as warning systems, but earthquakes still offer...
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

How Sea Butterflies "Fly" in Water

12th - Higher Ed
Birds fly, and fish swim. We learn this when we are children. But not everything in nature is quite so simple… Meet Limacina helicina, an artic-dwelling sea butterfly that flies through the water. Chapters View all SPY IN THE WILD 2 0:04...
Instructional Video11:36
TED Talks

TED: The global movement to restore nature's biodiversity | Thomas Crowther

12th - Higher Ed
Biodiversity is the key to life on Earth and reviving our damaged planet, says ecologist Thomas Crowther. Sharing the inside story of his headline-making research on reforestation, which led to the UN's viral Trillion Trees Campaign,...
Instructional Video8:58
TED Talks

TED: Why Indigenous forest guardianship is crucial to climate action | Nonette Royo

12th - Higher Ed
Indigenous communities have looked after their ancestral forests for millennia, cultivating immense amounts of knowledge on how to protect, nourish and heal these vital environments. Today, 470 million Indigenous people care for and...
Instructional Video10:58
TED Talks

TED: What happens when biology becomes technology? | Christina Agapakis

12th - Higher Ed
We've been promised a future of chrome -- but what if the future is fleshy? asks biological designer Christina Agapakis. In this awe-inspiring talk, Agapakis details her work in synthetic biology -- a multidisciplinary area of research...
Instructional Video6:02
Be Smart

How the Meter Became The Meter

12th - Higher Ed
The meter is the world's ultimate measure, but how did it become "the" meter? What is this measurement based on? The story of this revolution in measurement traces its roots to the French Revolution. Scientists decided that an equal and...
Instructional Video3:40
SciShow

How Is That Not Killing You?

12th - Higher Ed
When Hank watches nature documentaries he always comes away with one big question: how is that not killing you? In today's episode of SciShow he looks at three unusual ways that animals manage not to get killed by nature.
Instructional Video5:00
TED Talks

Nalini Nadkarni: Life science in prison

12th - Higher Ed
Nalini Nadkarni challenges our perspective on trees and prisons -- she says both can be more dynamic than we think. Through a partnership with the state of Washington, she brings science classes and conservation programs to inmates, with...