Instructional Video5:53
SciShow Kids

Make a Calendar of Seeds! | Squeaks Grows a Garden!| SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Every plant has different needs! So Mister Brown and Squeaks have asked their friend Juniper the Earthworm to teach them more about the things they want to grow in their garden and help them make a seed calendar so they know when to...
Instructional Video17:01
SciShow Kids

Can You Guess the Weather? | Weather Guessing Game | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
There’s all sorts of weather out there, so Squeaks and Mister Brown are playing a game show where they will learn all about the different types!
Instructional Video5:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you freeze your body and come back to life? | Shannon N. Tessier

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1967, James Bedford had a plan to cheat death. He was the first person to be cryogenically frozen. This process promised to preserve his body until a theoretical future when humanity could cure any illness, and essentially, reverse...
Instructional Video5:42
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What would happen if you lost your sense of touch? | Antonio Cataldo

Pre-K - Higher Ed
We don't often think of touch as being a vital part of movement, but touch is one part of a network that oversees all the sensations arising from the surface and interior of our bodies. Touch, pain, temperature, and our spatial awareness...
Instructional Video8:27
Bozeman Science

The Greenhouse Effect

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the greenhouse effect and greenhouse gases keep our planet warm enough to be habitable. He explains how greenhouse gases keep heat closer to the surface. He finally shows how increases in...
Instructional Video13:51
Instructional Video14:12
3Blue1Brown

Solving the heat equation | DE3

12th - Higher Ed
Solving the heat equation.
Instructional Video4:45
Bozeman Science

Coral Bleaching

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows how increasing ocean temperatures causes coral polyps to release their symbiotic algae. This process of coral bleaching decreases the availability of energy for the coral and may eventually lead to coral...
Instructional Video2:03
SciShow

Why Is My Body Temperature 37 Degrees?

12th - Higher Ed
Your body is really good at keeping its temperature at around 37� C, but have you ever wondered why?
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

The 2016 Nobel Prizes: Chemistry and Physics!

12th - Higher Ed
This Nobel Prize season, dive into the world of the super small for physics and chemistry. It's where the nanocars roam and phase transitions get really weird.
Instructional Video11:13
SciShow

5 Ways Biology Is Transforming Buildings

12th - Higher Ed
Throughout history humans have come up with lots of different ways to build shelters for themselves. But sometimes, inspiration for better construction materials comes from nature, in structures you might not expect — like the scales on a
Instructional Video17:38
3Blue1Brown

But what is a partial differential equation? | DE2

12th - Higher Ed
The heat equation, as an introductory PDE.
Instructional Video4:11
SciShow

Bioprecipitation: How Bacteria Makes Snow

12th - Higher Ed
Raindrops and snowflakes generally start to form around something else in the air, like a speck of dust, but sometimes that something else is bacteria.
Instructional Video10:15
SciShow

7 Ways to Spruce Up Your Cooking with Science

12th - Higher Ed
Your kitchen really is your own personal science lab, so here are some science-based cooking tricks to make tastier, healthier, and awesomer meals.
Instructional Video4:45
Bozeman Science

Scalar Field

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how scalar fields can be used to show the distribution of scalar quantities. The most important scalar fields in AP Physics 2 deal with electric potential. Scalar addition can be used to combine...
Instructional Video4:20
TED-Ed

The "myth" of the boiling frog | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Since 1850, global average temperatures have risen by 1 degree Celsius. That may not sound like a lot, but it is. Why? 1 degree is an average. Many places have already gotten much warmer and if average temperatures increase one more...
Instructional Video21:52
SciShow

A User's Guide to the Human Body

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever wondered why you crave certain foods or what your appendix actually does, there's something in this collection for you!
Instructional Video9:13
SciShow

How Climate Scientists Predict the Future

12th - Higher Ed
Over the years, scientists have made a lot of predictions about how Earth's climate is changing, but they don't just pull those predictions from thin air.
Instructional Video3:53
SciShow Kids

Where Does Frost Come From? | Winter Science | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
If you've ever gone outside really early on a cold day in fall, you might have seen a thin layer of sparkly ice crystals covering everything! That ice is called frost, and it can only form if the weather is exactly right! ///Next...
Instructional Video5:33
SciShow

Breast Cancer gets Worse in the Spring and Fall. But...Why?

12th - Higher Ed
Seasonal illnesses from infectious diseases aren’t a new concept, but a few decades ago public health experts began to notice the same behavior in some non-infectious diseases like breast cancer. These patterns have helped us learn a lot...
Instructional Video9:51
Bozeman Science

Cellular Variation

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how variation is created within a cell. He starts by showing how molecular variation can increase fitness at the local level. He explains how an additional chlorophyll molecule allows plants to absorb more light...
Instructional Video5:01
SciShow

Can Moon Colonies Get Oxygen From the...Moon?

12th - Higher Ed
As we look towards longer missions to the Moon, the shear amount of resources needed to survive becomes a much bigger question. Without space semi-trucks to haul life-giving resources to astronauts, can we utilize the Moon’s barren...
Instructional Video20:01
SciShow

5 Things You Were Taught Wrong in Elementary School | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
When you’re learning about science for the first time, it can be easier to break things down into a simpler form, and you can end up with a few misconceptions about the world. But sometimes this is the first step to understanding that...
Instructional Video12:56
SciShow

5 Times Scientists Were Very Wrong About New Discoveries, Because of Hope

12th - Higher Ed
Passionate scientists constantly have revolutionary ideas, but when they seem too good to be true, they usually are.