Nature League
What Are Invertebrates? - Lesson Plan
In this Nature League Lesson Plan, Brit introduces the invertebrates of Earth, including their names, relationships, forms, and awesomeness.
Professor Dave Explains
The Skeletal System
Now that we know more about the structure of bones, we are ready to see how they all come together to form the skeletal system. An adult has 206 bones. What are they? How are they organized? What do they do? Let's go through all of these...
Curated Video
LA Clippers Launch 'Moneyball' Fan Competition in Augmented Reality
Cheddar's Max Godnick visited the Staples Center, home to the L.A. Clippers, to get an up close look at the team's popular Moneyball competition, where fans shoot baskets for cash prizes. The franchise is expanding the game into the...
Curated Video
More discoveries about the super-sized Titanoboa snake
Fossils tell the story of an aquatic snake that was longer than a school bus and weighed over 1,000 kilograms. And an Edmonton paleontologist recently made a new discovery to broaden the snake’s story and our understanding of the...
Curated Video
Behind the scenes with a duck-billed dino fossil at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum
We're getting a close-up look at some research into animals that call our province home and some that lived here long ago. Researchers at the Royal Saskatchewan Museum in Regina showed off some recent discoveries they've made. One of...
TED-Ed
Why Do Your Knuckles Pop?
Pop! Why does bending your joints in a certain way cause a cracking sound? This fascinating video delves into the synovial fluid and "bubbles" that exist in your in the space between stretched out joints, as well as debunks...
The Brain Scoop
Bending Fossils: Experiments In Paleontology (Harvard Adventures, Part 3)
How can we bend a fossil? Junior paleontologists explore the joint movements of extinct species in Brain Scoop's Fossils and Geology series. The narrator works with a paleontology curator to show the experiments performed on the...
Curated OER
Nervous System A and P Part 1
A British speaker lectures on the parts of the nervous system. He writes the names on large paper as well so that viewers can follow along. He draws a neuron, explaining all its parts. The video cuts off after the nodes of Ranvier are...