Instructional Video10:12
SciShow

4 Algorithms We Borrowed from Nature

12th - Higher Ed
We use algorithms every day for things like image searches, predictive text, and securing sensitive data. Algorithms show up all over nature, too, in places like your immune system and schools of fish, and computer scientists have...
Instructional Video4:22
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Will the ocean ever run out of fish? - Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Jennifer Jacquet

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When most people think of fishing, we imagine relaxing in a boat and patiently reeling in the day's catch. But modern industrial fishing -- the kind that stocks our grocery shelves -- looks more like warfare. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and...
Instructional Video9:12
SciShow

Anal Teeth, Paralyzing Farts, and Other Weaponized Butts

12th - Higher Ed
All animals have adaptations that help them survive in the wild...some just focus more on back-end development than others. Whether for offense, defense, or both, here are five creatures with butt-kicking behinds!
Instructional Video5:20
SciShow

This Star Just Won't Stop Exploding!

12th - Higher Ed
M31N 2008-12a is a rare phenomenon called a recurrent nova, and it may hold the key to understanding the lives and cataclysmic deaths of massive stars.
Instructional Video3:40
SciShow

This Beautiful House Is Made of Snot

12th - Higher Ed
These giant balls of mucus may seem like a bizarre sight in the open ocean, but all this snot serves a purpose, both for the tiny creatures that produce it and for the entire ocean ecosystem!
Instructional Video5:38
SciShow

Why It's Good for COVID-19 Models to Be Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
As we react to the predictions that epidemiological models make, changing the ways we act and go about our lives, those estimates can appear totally off. But if a model’s predictions end up being wrong, that might mean it's done exactly...
Instructional Video11:39
TED Talks

TED: The little risks you can take to increase your luck | Tina Seelig

12th - Higher Ed
Luck is rarely a lightning strike, isolated and dramatic -- it's much more like the wind, blowing constantly. Catching more of it is easy but not obvious. In this insightful talk, Stanford engineering school professor Tina Seelig shares...
Instructional Video2:25
SciShow

The Bacon Hoax & the Next REAL Food Shortage

12th - Higher Ed
Hank eases our minds about the alleged bacon shortage, and informs us of some actual meat shortages we may see the effects of in the coming years.
Instructional Video3:35
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: If superpowers were real: Super strength - Joy Lin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What if super strength wasn't just the stuff of epic comic book stories? Is it scientifically possible to be super strong? In this series, Joy Lin tackles six superpowers and reveals just how scientifically realistic they can be to us...
Instructional Video3:38
SciShow

Attack of the Brain-Eating Killer Songbirds

12th - Higher Ed
Zombies aren't coming for you brains, but for an unfortunate species of bats, the terror of seemingly sweet songbirds developing a taste for brains is a horrific reality.
Instructional Video15:43
TED Talks

Hans Rosling: Asia's rise -- how and when

12th - Higher Ed
Hans Rosling was a young guest student in India when he first realized that Asia had all the capacities to reclaim its place as the world's dominant economic force. At TEDIndia, he graphs global economic growth since 1858 and predicts...
Instructional Video1:53
MinutePhysics

Faster Than Light Neutrinos (maybe) - Field Trip!

12th - Higher Ed
Come with us to Italy to find out what went into measuring the FTL neutrinos.
Instructional Video3:38
SciShow

The Mystery of the Barreleye Fish

12th - Higher Ed
In the Pacific Ocean, there lives a fish that's . . . a little different. Hank tells you all about the Pacific barreleye fish!
Instructional Video8:55
PBS

The Great American Eclipse

12th - Higher Ed
Get your eclipse glasses ready because the a total solar eclipse is an astronomical event unlike any other.
Instructional Video3:56
SciShow

The Future of Life in the Solar System

12th - Higher Ed
In five billion years, the Sun's going to evolve into a red giant. That's bad news for Earth, but exciting for some of the worlds a little farther out.
Instructional Video3:44
SciShow Kids

Why Do Animals Have Whiskers? | Amazing Animal Senses | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks and Mister Brown are learning about senses! Did you know that animals that have whiskers can use them to sense things? First Grade Next Generation Science Standards Crosscutting Concept: Structure and Function: The way an object...
Instructional Video3:05
SciShow

Bacteria and Viruses Are Raining Down on Us All the Time

12th - Higher Ed
While you probably aren’t going to get sick from just being outside in all this microbe rain, pathogenic organisms ARE raining down on us all the time, everywhere!
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

The Evolution of Spy Satellites

12th - Higher Ed
Today we take a look at the history and capabilities of spy satellites.
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow Kids

Narwhals: Unicorns of the Sea!

K - 5th
The ocean is full of some amazing creatures, but one that remains a bit of a mystery is the Narwhal, which looks like an underwater unicorn.
Instructional Video3:49
SciShow Kids

Who Knew? Amazing Owl Facts!

K - 5th
Who-who-who is quick, adorable and one of the best hunters in the whole bird family? Join Jessi and Squeaks to learn some amazing facts about owls!
Instructional Video11:11
TED Talks

TED: Save the oceans, feed the world! | Jackie Savitz

12th - Higher Ed
What's a marine biologist doing talking about world hunger? Well, says Jackie Savitz, fixing the world's oceans might just help to feed the planet's billion hungriest people. In an eye-opening talk, Savitz tells us what’s really going on...
Instructional Video3:28
TED-Ed

TED-ED: A poetic experiment: Walt Whitman, interpreted by three animators - Justin Moore

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Take a journey through Walt Whitman's poem 'A Noiseless Patient Spider' with the help of three animators who each used a different animation style to bring this beautiful poem to life.
Instructional Video5:41
SciShow

Space Parachutes: Predicting the Unpredictable

12th - Higher Ed
Parachutes are a big part of keeping our astronauts safe, but despite being around for almost 500 years, there are still a lot of things we need to work on before they can be full proof.
Instructional Video5:57
SciShow

We Probably Can't Save the Vaquita—But We Can Learn From Them

12th - Higher Ed
Save the Vaquita Day is the first Saturday after the 4th of July, and it serves as a reminder that preventing extinctions means acting early.