Instructional Video4:47
Financial Times

Turkey, Greece and the dash for gas

Higher Ed
FT energy editor David Sheppard uses maps of the eastern Mediterranean to explain why there is such interest in gas deposits. The Turkish exploration vessels searching for them are not using conventional drilling platforms while the...
Instructional Video12:14
Curated Video

CompTIA Security+ Certification SY0-601: The Total Course - Digital Forensics

Higher Ed
The application of computer science to legal situations include evidence gathering is referred to as digital forensics. This episode covers e-discovery and steganography. This clip is from the chapter "Dealing with Incidents" of the...
Instructional Video3:18
FuseSchool

What Are Quarks?

6th - Higher Ed
Find out what quarks are, how they were discovered and why they are very important in relation to protons and neutrons. There are different types of quarks which you'll learn about in this GCSE / K12 "Radioactivity" video from the...
Instructional Video6:40
Physics Girl

The Most MYSTERIOUS Object in the Universe

9th - 12th
Physics Girl astrophysics series - Brown Dwarfs are among the most recently observed objects in the universe. They have at MOST 8% the mass of the Sun. The lower mass boundary is not known! So they are halfway between stars and gas giant...
Instructional Video1:26
Science360

NSF-funded BICEP2 collaborators announce confirmation of cosmic inflation

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers with the National Science Foundation-funded BICEP2 Collaboration announced that their telescope in Antarctica has allowed them to collect what they believe is the first direct evidence for cosmic inflation. Inflation is the...
Instructional Video2:35
Science360

Osorb: Absorbent Nanomaterial Cleans up Toxic Water

12th - Higher Ed
Science is full of surprises. Chemist Paul Edmiston's search for a new way to detect explosives at airports, instead, led to the creation of what's now called ""Osorb,"" swellable, organically-modified silica, or glass, capable of...
Instructional Video9:25
Curated Video

Turkey, Sardis ancient city

12th - Higher Ed
The Greek historian and father of history, Herodotus, notes that the city was founded by the sons of Hercules, the Heraclides.The earliest reference to Sardis is in The Persians of Aeschylus (472 BC); in the Iliad, the name Hyde seems to...
Instructional Video4:33
Cerebellum

Colonization Of North America: The First Settlement - The Spanish Missions And Native American Slavery

9th - 12th
Discusses the French trading networks, their alliances with Native Americans, and their conflicts with settlers. Colonization Of North America The First Settlement. This video looks at the Spanish attempts at spreading Catholicism...
Instructional Video5:14
Science360

The birth of the first stars

12th - Higher Ed
When did the first stars light up the universe? After 12 years of experimental effort, a team of scientists has detected the fingerprints of the earliest stars in the universe. Find out how they did it! __For more on the discovery, see...
Instructional Video1:55
Science360

Scientists Discover Oldest Croc-Like Cousin to the Dinosaur!

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have discovered the oldest cousin to the dinosaur! The creature named Teleocrater rhadinus, is a carnivorous animal living more than 245 million years ago during the Triassic Period, before dinosaurs. Recently unearthed in...
Instructional Video7:33
Curated Video

Using Adjectival Phrases to Make Your Writing Stronger

K - 5th
In this video, the teacher explains the concept of adjectival phrases and how they can be used to enhance writing. The teacher provides examples and guides the students through practice exercises. The students are encouraged to identify...
Instructional Video1:08
Cerebellum

Early Scientific Revolution - Leonhard Fuchs

9th - 12th
Europe experienced one of the most remarkable periods in history roughly between 1550 and 1700, when three of history's most important events were occurring simultaneously: the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the Scientific Revolution....
Instructional Video4:14
Science360

Materials Genome Initiative - Three Years of Progress

12th - Higher Ed
Advanced materials are essential to human well-being and are the cornerstone for emerging industries. Yet today, it can take ten to twenty years or more from initial research on a new material to first use. That's why in June 2011...
Instructional Video2:58
Soliloquy

Frisland, the Fake Isles

12th - Higher Ed
In 1558 Nicolo Zeno announced to the world he had found in his family home in Venice, a map and accompanying letters that described a long voyage made by the his ancestors. On this voyage the Zeno Brothers found an island called...
Instructional Video4:02
Curated Video

Learning Python Web Penetration Testing (Video 13)

Higher Ed
With the huge growth in the number of web applications in the recent times, there has also been an upsurge in the need to make these applications secure. Web penetration testing is the use of tools and code to attack a website or web app...
Instructional Video1:36
Bill Carmody

The Customer Journey

Higher Ed
In this video, Bill Carmody tells you why you should map your customer's journey to remind you what you are doing in each phase of the journey.
Instructional Video12:22
Neuro Transmissions

Losing The Nobel Prize

12th - Higher Ed
The Nobel Prize is often viewed as the ultimate achievement in science. But to what extent would you go to win it? In 2014, astronomer Dr. Brian Keating invented BICEP2, the most powerful cosmology telescope ever made. Using this, he...
Instructional Video3:11
Cerebellum

Early Scientific Revolution - Tycho Brahe

9th - 12th
Europe experienced one of the most remarkable periods in history roughly between 1550 and 1700, when three of history's most important events were occurring simultaneously: the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the Scientific Revolution....
Instructional Video4:21
Curated Video

Italy, Pompeii - Temple of Isis

12th - Higher Ed
The Temple of Isis is a Roman temple dedicated to the Egyptian goddess Isis. This small and almost intact temple was among one of the first discoveries during the excavation of Pompeii in 1764. Its role as a Hellenized Egyptian temple in...
Instructional Video5:50
Science360

The oldest fossil evidence of modern, venomous snakes in Africa! NSF Science Now 21.

12th - Higher Ed
In this week's episode, we discover the oldest fossil evidence of modern, venomous snakes in Africa; we discover what was going on in the earliest moments of our universe just after the Big Bang; and, finally, we learn about a weather...
Instructional Video3:51
Science360

Enormous Underwater Fossil Graveyard Found

12th - Higher Ed
National Science Foundation-funded anthropologists and paleontologists uncovered what could be the largest single collection of lemur remains ever found. What’s more, they found it in a most unusual place--hidden in a series of...
Instructional Video9:47
AllTime 10s

10 Strangest Underwater Discoveries

12th - Higher Ed
With so much of the earth's oceans being unmapped, there are certainly some strange things down there. . .
Instructional Video0:55
Cerebellum

Late Scientific Revolution - Nehemiah Grew

9th - 12th
Part II of The Scientific Revolution explores the latter half of this movement and the gradual acceptance of scientific truth. This fascinating period of history chronicles European society's emergence from church domination that...
Instructional Video10:58
Physics Girl

Everything you should know about TRAPPIST-1 exoplanets

9th - 12th
The TRAPPIST-1 exoplanet system has seven earth-like planets and is only 39 lightyears away! I am joined by Professor Adam Burgasser and Dr. Katherine Deck, both astrophysicists on the Nature paper to discuss the discovery of this...