Instructional Video3:03
MinutePhysics

Why are Stars Star-Shaped

12th - Higher Ed
Why are Stars Star-Shaped
Instructional Video0:57
MinutePhysics

Tour of the Map of the Big Bang

12th - Higher Ed
Ever wanted to explore the Cosmic Background Radiation? It's our best picture of the big bang, and now you can!
Instructional Video1:21
MinutePhysics

Misconceptions Footnote †: Randomness and Feedback

12th - Higher Ed
Footnote to the main video here: https://youtu.be/HUti6vGctQM Feedback loops and spurious correlations! REFERENCES: Spurious correlations: http://www.tylervigen.com/spurious-correlations Loopy by Nicky Case: http://ncase.me/loopy/...
Instructional Video7:37
TED Talks

TED: Life is hard. Art helps | Liana Finck

12th - Higher Ed
Cartoonist Liana Finck's drawings hold our hands through life's predicaments, big and small: dating, breakups, what to make for dinner, how to leave a party without being rude, how to think about our relationship with God. In a funny,...
Instructional Video4:25
SciShow

The Sun Is Green

12th - Higher Ed
The Sun is green, actually. We'll go into why the blackbody effect means the Sun emits more green visible light than any other color, and why evolution and color perception mean it's ok to see it as yellow, anyway.
Instructional Video5:36
SciShow

The Fiercest of Them All: Meet the T-Rex

12th - Higher Ed
According to the fossils we've found, it turns out the T-Rex may look different than what we thought! Join Hank Green for a fascinating dive into the past, and a realistic look at what the King of the Dinosaurs was actually like. Let's...
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow Kids

Looking at the Earth! | How We Study Space | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
If you were looking down at the Earth from space, what would you be able to see? Do you think you would be able to see your house? What if you were super far away?
News Clip3:33
Associated Press

FEMA: Texas floods "a landmark event

Higher Ed
The director of the US Federal Emergency Management Agency on Monday called on the people of Texas and Louisiana to "be involved" as the states struggle with the devastating impact of Tropical Storm Harvey. Speaking at FEMA's...
News Clip2:08
Curated Video

USA: BRITAIN'S DEFENCE SECRETARY ROBERTSON KOSOVO SPEECH

Higher Ed
English/Nat The British Secretary of Defence, George Robertson, defended NATO's military actions in Yugoslavia on Friday by expressing zero-tolerance to the alleged forced displacement and expulsion of ethnic Albanians from the Kosovo...
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

Where's My Bloodless Blood Sugar Monitor

12th - Higher Ed
There are about 450 million diabetics around the world, and while we do already have a reliable way of measuring blood sugar, it requires patients to prick their finger each time they want a reading. Is there a better way?
Instructional Video13:08
Bozeman Science

The New AP Biology Exam - A User's Guide

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen describes the new AP Biology Exam. This exam will be given for the first time in May of 2013 and will be different from all previous exams. In this video Paul Andersen describes the scoring and the two parts...
Instructional Video3:29
MinutePhysics

Why are Stars Star-Shaped

12th - Higher Ed
Why are Stars Star-Shaped
Instructional Video5:50
Bozeman Science

Contour Lines

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how contour lines show areas of equal elevation or equal gravitational potential. Contour lines are used as an analogy for lines of equipotential in electric fields.
Instructional Video9:35
3Blue1Brown

The hardest problem on the hardest test

12th - Higher Ed
A geometry/probability question on the Putnam, a famously hard test, about a random tetrahedron in a sphere. This offers an opportunity not just for a lesson about the problem, but about problem-solving tactics in general.
Instructional Video11:15
3Blue1Brown

The hardest problem on the hardest test

12th - Higher Ed
A geometry/probability question on the Putnam, a famously hard test, about a random tetrahedron in a sphere. This offers an opportunity not just for a lesson about the problem, but about problem-solving tactics in general.
Instructional Video5:23
Be Smart

What Do Raindrops Really Look Like?

12th - Higher Ed
What do raindrops look like? Exactly how we drew them as kids, right? Wrong! Teardrop-shaped rain is physically impossible. This week I went inside a vertical wind tunnel to bring you the true shape of rain.
Instructional Video3:02
SciShow Kids

What Is Squid Ink?

K - 5th
Our friend the Giant Squid inspired a SciShow Kids viewer to write us and ask, 'What is squid ink, and can you write with it?' Jessi has the answers!
Instructional Video16:42
TED Talks

Rayma Suprani: Dictators hate political cartoons -- so I keep drawing them

12th - Higher Ed
"A political cartoon is a barometer of freedom," says Rayma Suprani, who was exiled from her native Venezuela for publishing work critical of the government. "That's why dictators hate cartoonists." In a talk illustrated with highlights...
Instructional Video4:28
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Causation - Level 4 - Cause, Mechanism and Effect

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on cause, mechanism and effect. TERMS: Cause - a thing that gives rise to an event Effect - an event Mechanism - the process underlying a phenomenon System - a set of...
Instructional Video8:21
TED Talks

Jiabao Li: Art that reveals how technology frames reality

12th - Higher Ed
In a talk that could change how you see things, designer and artist Jiabao Li introduces her conceptual projects that expose the inherent bias of digital media. From a helmet that makes you "allergic" to the color red to a browser...
Instructional Video8:21
Bozeman Science

Practice 2 - Developing and Using Models

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains the importance of modeling in science and engineering. Models are used by scientists to explain phenomenon. Unlike mental models, conceptual models can be shared by all scientists to improve our understanding of...
Instructional Video1:49
3Blue1Brown

A Curious Pattern Indeed

12th - Higher Ed
Moser's circle problem. What is this pattern: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 31,...
Instructional Video4:56
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Jeff Leek and Lucy McGowan: Can you spot the problem with these headlines? (Level 1)

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In medicine, there's often a disconnect between news headlines and the scientific research they cover. While headlines are designed to catch attention, many studies produce meaningful results when they focus on a narrow, specific...
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

Quick, Draw!: Doodling for Science

12th - Higher Ed
Google's fun new time-waster is actually a pretty advanced piece of Artificial Intelligence. And there's some (about 43%) good news about cement's carbon footprint this week!