Instructional Video9:37
TED Talks

TED: Why you should disappoint your parents | Desiree Akhavan

12th - Higher Ed
When filmmaker Desiree Akhavan told her Iranian immigrant parents she was in love with a woman, she knew they would object. She explains why it's worth the risk to let people get to know the real you.
Instructional Video9:23
SciShow

Four Weird Ways to Make Electricity

12th - Higher Ed
When you think of newer ways to make electricity, solar cells and wind turbines may come to mind. But scientists can make the stuff from just about anything. And they're working on some truly bizarre ways to generate power.
Instructional Video9:11
SciShow

Can You Make A Computer Out Of Food?

12th - Higher Ed
Could an edible computer be in your future? Researchers are currently working on several of the components you find in them, from batteries to circuit boards to logic gates.
Instructional Video7:46
SciShow

This Crystal Is ELECTRIC

12th - Higher Ed
There's a few minerals that exhibit something called piezoelectricity and pyroelectricity, which mean that either heat or pressure can turn them electric. Here's a demo from the SciShow Rocks Box where you can see this for yourself - all...
Instructional Video11:56
TED Talks

TED: The secret perks of driving electric | Cynthia Williams

12th - Higher Ed
Electric vehicles need to be more than just eco-friendly — they have to be more chic, convenient and affordable than their gas-powered alternatives, says sustainability leader Cynthia Williams. She explores what it'll take for an...
Instructional Video12:44
PBS

Does Antimatter Explain Why There's Something Rather Than Nothing?

12th - Higher Ed
The most precious substance in our universe is not gold, nor oil. It’s not even printer ink. It’s antimatter. But it’s worth every penny of it’s very high cost, because it may hold the answer to the question of why anything exists in our...
Instructional Video12:36
PBS

Why the Muon g-2 Results Are So Exciting!

12th - Higher Ed
When a theory makes a prediction that disagrees with an experimental test, sometimes it means we should throw the theory away. But what if that theory has otherwise produced the most successful predictions in all of physics? Then, that...
Instructional Video15:32
PBS

How Are Quasiparticles Different From Particles?

12th - Higher Ed
The device you’re watching this video on is best understood by thinking about positive and negative charges moving around a circuit of diodes and transistors. But the only elementary particle actually flowing in the circuit is the...
Instructional Video14:26
PBS

Could We Decode Alien Physics?

12th - Higher Ed
How hard can it really be to decode alien physics and engineering? It’s gotta map to our own physics - I mean, we live in the same universe. We start by noticing that the alien technology seems to use good ol’ fashioned electronics, even...
Instructional Video13:53
PBS

Our Antimatter, Mirrored, Time-Reversed Universe

12th - Higher Ed
The foundations of quantum theory rests on its symmetries. For example, it should be impossible to distinguish our universe from one that is that is the perfect mirror opposite in charge, handedness, and the direction of time. But one by...
Instructional Video14:38
PBS

Why Is 1/137 One of the Greatest Unsolved Problems In Physics?

12th - Higher Ed
The Fine Structure Constant is one the strangest numbers in all of physics. It’s the job of physicists to worry about numbers, but there’s one number that physicists have stressed about more than any other. That number is 0.00729735256 -...
Instructional Video2:56
SciShow

We Finally Know How Anesthesia Works

12th - Higher Ed
Even though doctors have been using general anesthesia for nearly 200 years, they haven’t really understood the details of how it temporarily shuts down your brain — until now.
Instructional Video4:35
SciShow

Why Haven't We Built a Better Battery?

12th - Higher Ed
Improving batteries is a tough problem, but it’s also an important one because in many ways the future of our planet also depends on the future of batteries. Luckily, scientists are on the case, figuring out ways to give this essential...
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

The Science of a Selfie

12th - Higher Ed
Taking photos used to require technical knowledge and time in a lab, but now we have electronic devices in our pockets that do all of the work for us. How do these miracle devices do it? Hosted by: Olivia Gordon
Instructional Video7:06
SciShow

5D, Holograms, & DNA: Amazing Hard Drives of the Future

12th - Higher Ed
Today's data storage solutions have an expiration date. What's on the horizon to replace them?
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

What Happens When a Venomous Snake Bites Itself?

12th - Higher Ed
Venomous snakes produce some of the world’s deadliest substances, so they have to be pretty careful about how they use it. But what happens if they accidentally inject themselves with their own harmful cocktail?
Instructional Video2:59
SciShow

Earth Has Another Magnetic Field

12th - Higher Ed
You probably know about the geomagnetic field that protects the earth from solar storms and radiation. But precision satellites have measured ANOTHER magnetic field coming from Earth, and its signals might hold the key to searching for...
Instructional Video3:08
SciShow

Why You Can't Bake a Mason Jar

12th - Higher Ed
Regular old glass like the kind that makes up a mason jar can shatter and explode if put in the oven. But we do have types of glass that you can bake your pie or brownies in and it's all thanks to some neat chemical tricks.
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 Video6:38
TED Talks

TED: How to participate in your own legal defense | Lam Ho

12th - Higher Ed
Lawyers are advocates for their clients -- and, in court, they're usually the ones who do the talking. Should that always be the case? In an effort to shift this power dynamic, TED Fellow and legal aid activist Lam Ho shares how lawyers...
Instructional Video12:20
TED Talks

TED: Great leadership is a network, not a hierarchy | Gitte Frederiksen

12th - Higher Ed
What if leadership at work wasn't for a select few, but rather shared among many? Management consultant Gitte Frederiksen gives us the recipe for "distributed leadership" -- dynamic, multidimensional networks of leaders that tap into...
News Clip3:10
Curated Video

Opening arguments in Supreme Court over Guantanamo detainee

Higher Ed
AP Television 1. Exterior of Supreme Court 2. People walking by Supreme Court 3. Statue outside Supreme Court - pull out to show crowds ++AUDIO OVERLAID WITH COURT SKETCHES - MUST COURTESY: Sketches by Ari Hennessey++ 4. SOUNDBITE:...
News Clip1:49
Curated Video

Hundreds of tourists flee fire in downtown Bangkok hotel

Higher Ed
1. Wide shot of Mandarin Hotel, close to city's commercial and nightlife centre, with smoke coming out of window 2. Window with smoke rising 3. Wide shot of hotel frontage; shot tilts down to show fire engine 4. Hotel sign 5. Wide shot...
Instructional Video11:03
PBS

What Survives Inside A Black Hole?

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are the result of absolute gravitational collapse of a massive body: a point of hypothetical infinite density surrounded by an event horizon. At that horizon time is frozen and the fabric of space itself cascades inwards at...