Instructional Video6:24
SciShow Kids

Water's Amazing Journey | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewWater makes an amazing journey around the world called the water cycle. Squeaks and his friends put on a play to learn all about it!
News Clip7:13
PBS

Stephen King reflects on his iconic career and latest release ‘You Like It Darker’

12th - Higher Ed
Fifty years ago, a 26-year-old rural Maine school teacher wrote the horror novel “Carrie.” That man, Stephen King, has gone on to write more than 60 books and many have been turned into such films as “The Shining” and “Shawshank...
Instructional Video3:54
MinutePhysics

Pot Theft (A Radiolab Adventure)

12th - Higher Ed
Pot Theft (A Radiolab Adventure)
Instructional Video11:56
SciShow

The Founder Of Forensic Anthropology Was Wrong About Everything

12th - Higher Ed
Aleš Hrdlička is known as the founder of forensic anthropology, and remains a huge part of the story of the history of anthropology as a science. But his legacy of racism and just bad science is one that this field has been reckoning...
News Clip6:34
PBS

Americans are drowning in medical debt, so this nonprofit is buying — and forgiving — it

12th - Higher Ed
Collectively, Americans owe nearly a trillion dollars of medical debt, and Congress is trying to figure out a policy response. But in the meantime, economics correspondent Paul Solman reports on an unusual non-profit’s effort to relieve...
News Clip6:56
PBS

The new librarian of Congress on the value of 'free information'

12th - Higher Ed
The Library of Congress has a new chief: Carla Hayden. Most of her predecessors in the role have come from scholarly institutions, but Hayden is a librarian through and through. She is also the first woman and the first African American...
News Clip8:18
PBS

Relics and treasures reveal U.S. history through African-American lens

12th - Higher Ed
One hundred years in the making, the National Museum of African American History and Culture will open on Saturday in Washington. The museum presents history through objects both celebratory and sobering -- showcasing everything from...
News Clip5:11
PBS

Summer Reading Lists For Young People At A Time Of Crisis

12th - Higher Ed
Amid dual national crises of a pandemic and outrage over racism and police brutality, books provide opportunities both to learn more and to find distraction from reality. Jeffrey Brown talks to writer Jason Reynolds, the Library of...
Instructional Video14:35
PBS

What are Numbers Made of?

12th - Higher Ed
In the physical world, many seemingly basic things turn out to be built from even more basic things. Molecules are made of atoms, atoms are made of protons, neutrons, and electrons. So what are numbers made of?
Instructional Video13:01
TED Talks

TED: Why museums are returning cultural treasures | Chip Colwell

12th - Higher Ed
Archaeologist and curator Chip Colwell collects artifacts for his museum, but he also returns them to where they came from. In a thought-provoking talk, he shares how some museums are confronting their legacies of stealing spiritual...
Instructional Video18:28
TED Talks

Paola Antonelli: Why I brought Pac-Man to MoMA

12th - Higher Ed
When the Museum of Modern Art's senior curator of architecture and design announced the acquisition of 14 video games in 2012, "all hell broke loose." In this far-ranging, entertaining, and deeply insightful talk, Paola Antonelli...
Instructional Video15:10
PBS

Arrow's Impossibility Theorem

12th - Higher Ed
The bizarre Arrow's Impossibility Theorem, or Arrow's Paradox, shows a counterintuitive relationship between fair voting procedures and dictatorships.
Instructional Video4:41
TED Talks

Gabriel Barcia-Colombo: Capturing memories in video art

12th - Higher Ed
Using video mapping and projection, artist Gabriel Barcia-Colombo captures and shares his memories and friendships. At TED Fellow Talks, he shows his charming, thoughtful work -- which appears to preserve the people in his life in jars,...
Instructional Video11:51
TED Talks

TED: Why sneakers are a great investment | Josh Luber

12th - Higher Ed
Josh Luber is a "sneakerhead," a collector of rare or limited sneakers. With their insatiable appetite for exclusive sneakers, these tastemakers drive marketing and create hype for the brands they love, specifically Nike, which...
Instructional Video15:33
PBS

How Big are All Infinities Combined? (Cantor's Paradox)

12th - Higher Ed
Infinities come in different sizes. There's a whole tower of progressively larger "sizes of infinity". So what's the right way to describe the size of the whole tower?
Instructional Video4:42
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why should you read Sylvia Plath? - Iseult Gillespie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Explore the haunting and intimate works of poet Sylvia Plath, who digs into issues of mental health, trauma and sexuality in works like “The Bell Jar.” -- Under her shrewd eye and pen, Sylvia Plath turned everyday objects into haunting...
Instructional Video8:11
PBS

Inside the Dinosaur Library

12th - Higher Ed
We're back in Bozeman, Montana this week talking to Amy Atwater, Collections Manager at the Museum of the Rockies. MOR has among the largest collections of North American dinosaurs in the United States. We talk to Amy about her job and...
Instructional Video3:22
SciShow

4 Awesome Future Space Missions

12th - Higher Ed
Hank fills us in on the four exploratory missions to space that he is most excited about - New Horizons is going to Pluto and the Kuiper belt; Juno is on it's way to Jupiter; Dawn is exploring two large asteroids; Rosetta will land on a...
Instructional Video2:29
Bozeman Science

Systems

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how systems are two or more objects that interact with one another. If a system has no relevant internal structure it can be treated as an object. The conservation laws apply to energy, charge and...
Instructional Video6:26
TED Talks

Tom Wujec: 3 ways the brain creates meaning

12th - Higher Ed
Information designer Tom Wujec talks through three areas of the brain that help us understand words, images, feelings, connections. In this short talk from TEDU, he asks: How can we best engage our brains to help us better understand big...
Instructional Video4:11
MinutePhysics

Pot Theft (A Radiolab Adventure)

12th - Higher Ed
Pot Theft (A Radiolab Adventure)
Instructional Video7:48
TED Talks

TED: Mind-blowing, magnified portraits of insects | Levon Biss

12th - Higher Ed
Photographer Levon Biss was looking for a new, extraordinary subject when one afternoon he and his young son popped a ground beetle under a microscope and discovered the wondrous world of insects. Applying his knowledge of photography to...
Instructional Video11:59
TED Talks

Julian Baggini: Is there a real you?

12th - Higher Ed
What makes you, you? Is it how you think of yourself, how others think of you, or something else entirely? Philosopher Julian Baggini draws from philosophy and neuroscience to give a surprising answer.
Instructional Video3:50
SciShow Kids

Can Ketchup Clean a Penny?

K - 5th
Squeaks loves collecting shiny pennies, but sometimes he finds one that's sort of grimy and dull. Lucky for him, Jessi knows a really cool science trick to clean up those tarnished pennies!