Instructional Video9:59
Crash Course

Theories About Family & Marriage: Crash Course Sociology

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’ll explore how sociology defines family and the different terms used to describe specific types of family. We’ll look at marriage in different societies, as well as marital residential patterns and patterns of descent. And, of...
Instructional Video10:41
TED Talks

How to have constructive conversations | Julia Dhar

12th - Higher Ed
We need to figure out how we go into conversations not looking for the victory, but the progress, says world debate champion Julia Dhar. In this practical talk, she shares three essential features of productive disagreements grounded in...
Instructional Video8:30
Crash Course

Symbols, Values & Norms: Crash Course Sociology

12th - Higher Ed
What exactly is culture? This week we’re going to try to answer that, and explain the difference between material and non-material culture. We’ll look at three things that make up culture: symbols, values and beliefs, and norms. We’ll...
Instructional Video9:06
TED Talks

TED: What your smart devices know (and share) about you | Kashmir Hill and Surya Mattu

12th - Higher Ed
Once your smart devices can talk to you, who else are they talking to? Kashmir Hill and Surya Mattu wanted to find out -- so they outfitted Hill's apartment with 18 different internet-connected devices and built a special router to track...
Instructional Video15:03
TED Talks

TED: The genius behind some of the world's most famous buildings | Renzo Piano

12th - Higher Ed
Legendary architect Renzo Piano -- the mind behind such indelible buildings as The Shard in London, the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the new Whitney Museum of Art in New York City -- takes us on a stunning tour through his life's work....
Instructional Video6:01
TED Talks

TED: The legacy of matriarchs in the Yukon First Nations | Kluane Adamek

12th - Higher Ed
In the Yukon First Nations, women lead; generations of matriarchs have guided and directed the community by forging trade agreements, creating marriage alliances and ensuring business for all. Yukon Regional Chief Kluane Adamek urges...
Instructional Video12:19
TED Talks

Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy: How film transforms the way we see the world

12th - Higher Ed
Film has the power to change the way we think about ourselves and our culture. Documentarian and TED Fellow Sharmeen Obaid-Chinoy uses it to fight violence against women, turning her camera on the tradition of honor killings in Pakistan....
Instructional Video11:38
TED Talks

TED: Why you think you're right -- even if you're wrong | Julia Galef

12th - Higher Ed
Perspective is everything, especially when it comes to examining your beliefs. Are you a soldier, prone to defending your viewpoint at all costs -- or a scout, spurred by curiosity? Julia Galef examines the motivations behind these two...
Instructional Video3:26
SciShow

How Michael Faraday Changed the World with a Magnet | Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
From a blacksmith's son, to one of the most repeated names in physics textbooks, Michael Faraday epitomized the spirit of scientific exploration
Instructional Video5:37
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How did Hitler rise to power? - Alex Gendler and Anthony Hazard

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Decades after the fall of the Third Reich, it feels impossible to understand how Adolf Hitler, the tyrant who orchestrated one of the largest genocides in human history, could ever have risen to power in a democratic country. So how did...
Instructional Video10:03
Crash Course

Racial/Ethnic Prejudice & Discrimination: Crash Course Sociology

12th - Higher Ed
What’s the difference between race and ethnicity? Today we’ll look at how definitions of races and ethnicities have changed over time and across places. We also discuss the terms minority and minority-majority and how races are defined...
Instructional Video16:02
TED Talks

TED: The secret to living longer may be your social life | Susan Pinker

12th - Higher Ed
The Italian island of Sardinia has more than six times as many centenarians as the mainland and ten times as many as North America. Why? According to psychologist Susan Pinker, it's not a sunny disposition or a low-fat, gluten-free diet...
Instructional Video11:38
Crash Course

Marsha P. Johnson and the Stonewall Rebellion: Crash Course Black American History #41

12th - Higher Ed
Today we’re learning about Marsha P. Johnson and the Stonewall rebellion. Serving as a pivotal moment in the modern Gay Rights Movement, Stonewall began on June 28th, 1969, and lasted six days in New York City’s Greenwich Village. And...
Instructional Video13:24
Crash Course

Catholic Counter-Reformation: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
When the Protestant Reformation broke out in Western Europe, the Catholic Church got the message, at least a little bit. Pope Paul III called a council to look into reforming some aspects of the Catholic Church and try to stem the tide...
Instructional Video12:56
TED Talks

TED: What Americans agree on when it comes to health | Rebecca Onie

12th - Higher Ed
We may not be as deeply divided as we think -- at least when it comes to health, says Rebecca Onie. In a talk that cuts through the noise, Onie shares research that shows how, even across economic, political and racial divides, Americans...
Instructional Video14:13
TED Talks

Debbie Millman: How symbols and brands shape our humanity

12th - Higher Ed
"Branding is the profound manifestation of the human spirit," says designer and podcaster Debbie Millman. In a historical odyssey that she illustrated herself, Millman traces the evolution of branding, from cave paintings to flags to...
Instructional Video14:33
Crash Course

Rap and Hip Hop: Crash Course Black American History #47

12th - Higher Ed
Music is an integral part of Black American culture. Today, Clint Smith will teach you about rap & hip hop, and the cultural significance of artists including Public Enemy, Wu-Tang Clan, the Notorious B.I.G., Tupac, N.W.A., Queen...
Instructional Video18:37
TED Talks

TED: Will automation take away all our jobs? | David Autor

12th - Higher Ed
Here's a paradox you don't hear much about: despite a century of creating machines to do our work for us, the proportion of adults in the uS with a job has consistently gone up for the past 125 years. Why hasn't human labor become...
Instructional Video28:56
TED Talks

TED: How city mayors are taking action on climate change | Eric Garcetti

12th - Higher Ed
If you change your city, you're changing the world, says Eric Garcetti, mayor of Los Angeles and chair of C40 Cities, a network of the world's megacities committed to tackling the climate crisis. He shares tangible ways Los Angeles and...
Instructional Video13:55
TED Talks

Shad Begum: How women in Pakistan are creating political change

12th - Higher Ed
Activist Shad Begum has spent her life empowering women to live up to their full potential. In a personal talk, she shares her determined struggle to improve the lives of women in her deeply religious and conservative community in...
Instructional Video13:30
TED Talks

TED: The future of digital communication and privacy | Will Cathcart

12th - Higher Ed
People send 100 billion WhatsApp messages every day -- and they're all encrypted to protect them from potentially curious entities like companies, governments and even WhatsApp itself. With our increased reliance on digital communication...
Instructional Video9:04
TED Talks

TED: How your personality shapes your politics | Dannagal G. Young

12th - Higher Ed
Social psychologist Dannagal G. Young breaks down the link between our psychology and politics, showing how personality types largely fall into people who prioritize openness and flexibility (liberals) and those who prefer order and...
Instructional Video12:09
Crash Course

George Orwell's 1984, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 402

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green continues discussing George Orwell's 1984. Today we're talking about what the novel 1984 has to say about what some have called today's surveillance society. We'll also look at the idea that language can be used as a...
Instructional Video4:54
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What happened when the United States tried to ban alcohol | Rod Phillips

Pre-K - Higher Ed
On January 17, 1920, less than one hour after spirits had become illegal throughout the United States, armed men robbed a Chicago freight train and made off with thousands of dollars worth of whiskey. It was a first taste of the...