Instructional Video3:00
Curated Video

Efficient Farming with Aquaponics

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Aquaponics is a sustainable and highly efficient system that combines aquaculture (fish farming) with hydroponics (growing plants without soil). By utilizing the waste produced by fish to provide nutrients for plants, aquaponics requires...
Instructional Video4:12
The Backyard Scientist

Ammonium Chloride HCl + NH3 = NH4Cl Hydrochloric acid + ammonia hydroxide.

K - 5th
Easy DIY chemistry project, great for science fairs because its a great demonstration! This is great for the chemistry beginner.

I used 150ml of a 10% ammonia sol
ution
and 50ml

of 30% HCl

After they reacted, i boiled...
Instructional Video3:11
Mazz Media

Nitrogen Cycle

6th - 8th
This live-action video program is about the term nitrogen cycle. The program is designed to reinforce and support a student's comprehension and retention of the term nitrogen cycle through use of video footage, photographs, diagrams and...
Instructional Video10:49
Weird History

Hygiene In The Victorian Era

12th - Higher Ed
When you peel back all the layers of silk and lace, you'll discover that the Victorians were actually pretty gross.
Instructional Video3:35
Professor Dave Explains

Complex Ion Formation

9th - Higher Ed
Most transition metal cations can do something interesting in solution, they can interact with specific ligands to form complex ions. These coordinate covalent bonds are new territory, so let's get a mini introduction to inorganic...
Instructional Video13:55
ProTeachersVideo

KS3/4 Science: Banging Chemistry: Fast and Furious

Higher Ed
Trainee teacher Emma Bradley is shown a series of nine quick-fire exo- and endo-thermic reactions by Dr Kay Stephenson from the Royal Society of Chemistry and Simon Quinnell of the National Science Learning Centre, York. The...
Instructional Video4:05
FuseSchool

Mycoprotein

6th - Higher Ed
Protein is essential for life - we need protein to build muscle tissue, to make enzymes for our metabolic activity, to form the protective layer of our skin, to make DNA… in fact for most processes in our body. There are thought to be...
Instructional Video4:58
FuseSchool

Moles In Equations

6th - Higher Ed
Learn the basics about Moles in equations. How do you calculate a mole? How do moles work in equations? Find out more in this video!
Instructional Video6:38
EarthEcho International

Water by Design: Aquaponics 101

9th - 12th
The EarthEcho Expeditions explores how water scarcity is driving exciting innovations in engineering, featuring solutions proposed by end users of water like chef and farmer Adam Navidi who uses aquaponics to conserve water and grow...
Instructional Video7:56
Amoeba Sisters

Carbon and Nitrogen Cycles

7th - 12th Standards
As the world turns ... so do the carbon and nitrogen cycles! Introduce them both to eager young biologists through an animated video, part of an extensive biology playlist. The narrator explains how each element moves through its...
Instructional Video3:15
American Chemical Society

The Chemistry of Cats

9th - Higher Ed Standards
Cats provide many interesting chemistry connections! Learners explore chemical connections to cats in an episode of the ACS Reactions playlist. They pursue many chemistry topics including the neurological response to catnip and the...
Instructional Video5:15
Fuse School

Covalent Bonding in Methane, Ammonia, and Water

9th - 12th Standards
An instructive video explains the covalent bond patterns in methane, ammonia, water, and hydrogen fluoride. It includes their structures, two different methods for displaying their structures, their properties, and the reasons...
Instructional Video4:04
Fuse School

Social and Environmental Considerations of the Haber Process

9th - 12th
Man-made processes often have surprising environmental and social impacts. The 17th installment in a series of 35 lessons explains the environmental and social factors connected to the Haber Process. The impact on the aquatic environment...
Instructional Video2:55
Fuse School

Testing for Chlorides, Bromides, and Iodides

9th - 12th
How do we know when water is safe to drink? Part seven of a 10-part videos series uses water quality as a platform to explore the behavior of halide ions in solution, Further tests help learners differentiate between precipitates that...
Instructional Video2:56
Fuse School

Testing for the Negative Ions

9th - 12th
Polyatomic ions... where do I begin? One of the most difficult concepts for budding scientists to learn and recognize comes to life in an enlightening resource. Show pupils some demonstrations, via the sixth video in a series of 10, to...
Instructional Video3:27
Fuse School

Testing for Hydrogen, Oxygen, Carbon Dioxide, Ammonia, and Chlorine

9th - 12th
How can a chemist tell what gas a chemical reaction produced? Part two of a ten-part series prompts pupils to discover a number of simple tests that can reveal the identity of a gas. The video reinforces the concepts of solubility,...
Instructional Video3:38
Fuse School

Collecting and Identifying Gases

9th - 12th
How do you catch something that can't be seen, has no odor, and makes no sound? Discover the common methods of gas collection in this first of a ten-part video series. Learners see how the properties of density and solubility are...
Instructional Video5:22
Fuse School

Ammonium Salts and Solutions

9th - 12th Standards
The importance of ammonium salt solutions is covered in a video that explains how to solve the reactions, the chemical equations, and the structure of the various ions. 
Instructional Video1:51
Berkeley University of California

Heterogeneous Equilibrium

9th - Higher Ed Standards
When performing a gas lab, we are often under pressure. A four-video set offers a brief explanation of Henry's law and demonstrates a lab. The last two videos prompt learners to complete brief quizzes over the material.
Instructional Video
Khan Academy

Khan Academy: Common Ion Effect and Buffers

9th - 10th
See an example of calculating the pH of solution that is 1.00 M acetic acid and 1.00 M sodium acetate using ICE table. Also shown is another example of calculating pH of a solution that is 0.15 M ammonia and 0.35 M ammonium nitrate. [13:19]
Instructional Video
Khan Academy

Khan Academy: Titration of a Weak Base With a Strong Acid

9th - 10th
An example calculating the pH for titration of weak base, ammonia, with strong acid, HCl, before any HCl is added and at half-equivalence point. [14:57]
Instructional Video
Khan Academy

Khan Academy: Titration of a Weak Base With a Strong Acid (Continued)

9th - 10th
Calculate the pH for titration of weak base, ammonia, with strong acid, HCl, at the equivalence point and past the equivalence point. [14:47]