Instructional Video8:21
PBS

Is There a Fifth Fundamental Force? + Quantum Eraser Answer

12th - Higher Ed
Has a fifth fundamental force been discovered and how will this effect our understanding of the universe?
Instructional Video9:13
PBS

What Do Stars Sound Like?

12th - Higher Ed
We can now map the interiors of stars by "listening" to their harmonies as they vibrate with seismic waves.
Instructional Video3:12
SciShow Kids

Meet 3 Peculiar Penguins | Animal Science for Kids

K - 5th
When you think of penguins, you probably think of the kinds you’ve seen in cartoons and movies. But there are at least 18 different kinds of penguins, including some that are tiny, some that live in hot places, and even some that spend...
Instructional Video11:44
TED Talks

TED: The need for family reunification -- to make families whole again | Elizabeth Zion

12th - Higher Ed
I want all families to be made whole, to be reunified, to be together -- as is our right, says writer, poet and student Elizabeth Zion. In this profoundly moving talk, Zion shares the impacts of family separation, including her personal...
Instructional Video7:40
PBS

Is Buying Call of Duty a Moral Choice?

12th - Higher Ed
If you play video games, you've shot a gun. And those guns are REALISTIC. So real that many are actually LICENSED by IRL arms dealers. Which means that when you buy a video game, you're also putting money in the pockets of those gun...
Instructional Video6:50
TED Talks

TED: Language shouldn't be a barrier to climate action | Sophia Kianni

12th - Higher Ed
Most scientific literature is written only in English, creating an alarming knowledge gap for the 75 percent of the world who don't speak it. That's a big problem for climate change -- because it's hard to take action on something you...
Instructional Video5:46
SciShow

No Phones Arent Giving Kids Horns Seriously

12th - Higher Ed
You might have seen this story circulating on social media…but we’re here to let you know that children are NOT growing horns because they use cellphones. This is a great opportunity to learn from what can happen when both peer review...
Instructional Video12:24
Crash Course

Free Will, Witches, Murder, and Macbeth, Part 1: Crash Course Literature 409

12th - Higher Ed
The Sound! The Fury! Today, we're talking about Shakespeare's Scottish play, Macbeth. So, was Macbeth really predestined to do all the murdering and bad kinging and other terrible stuff? That's the big question in Macbeth, and it's one...
Instructional Video4:02
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Should you trust unanimous decisions? - Derek Abbott

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Imagine a police lineup where ten witnesses are asked to identify a bank robber they glimpsed fleeing the scene. If six of them pick the same person, there's a good chance that's the culprit. And if all ten do, you might think the case...
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

Why We Hide Our Good Deeds

12th - Higher Ed
It doesn’t make much sense when we try to hide our good deeds, even though we know that we would get rewards from doing something good. Scientists are trying to solve this our bizarre behavior by using game theory.
Instructional Video2:53
MinutePhysics

Why Doesn't Time Flow Backwards? (Big Picture Ep. 1/5)

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to Google Making and Science for supporting this series, and to Sean Carroll for collaborating on it! AMAZING Interactive Entropy explainer by Aatish Bhatia: http://aatishb.github.io/entropy/ This video is about why entropy gives...
Instructional Video6:59
SciShow

The Not-So-Silver Lining: When Positive Thinking Backfires

12th - Higher Ed
There are a multitude of books and motivational speakers that insist that anyone can think their way to happiness, but that advice really isn’t a one-size-fits-all solution.
Instructional Video17:26
TED Talks

TED: Why we need to end the War on Drugs | Ethan Nadelmann

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. Is the War on Drugs doing more harm than good? In a bold talk, drug policy reformist Ethan Nadelmann makes an...
Instructional Video2:23
MinuteEarth

How This Sea Shell Knows the Weather in Greenland

12th - Higher Ed
Foraminifera - tiny, single-celled marine life forms - build gorgeous houses that record how much ice there is on the planet. FYI: We try to leave jargon out of our videos, but if you want to learn more about this topic, here are some...
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

Meet Dragon Man, Humans’ Possible New Relative | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
In a bone-filled week, a rediscovered cranium from China might represent an entirely new species of human that's possibly our closest evolutionary relative. And, while studying a 5,000-year-old skeleton, scientists found evidence of what...
Instructional Video12:14
TED Talks

TED: Your words may predict your future mental health | Mariano Sigman

12th - Higher Ed
Can the way you speak and write today predict your future mental state, even the onset of psychosis? In this fascinating talk, neuroscientist Mariano Sigman reflects on ancient Greece and the origins of introspection to investigate how...
Instructional Video8:16
TED Talks

TED: How webtoons are changing movies and TV | Hyeonmi Kim

12th - Higher Ed
Pop culture is changing thanks to a different kind of storytelling, says digital strategist Hyeonmi Kim. They're called webtoons: comic-like illustrations published in short segments and meant to be read on a smartphone in five to 10...
Instructional Video4:08
SciShow

Music in Your DNA and A New Species of Human?

12th - Higher Ed
Is musical ability genetic? And were there more species of ancient humans than we once thought? SciShow News investigates!
Instructional Video13:32
PBS

The Mathematics of Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange

12th - Higher Ed
Symmetric keys are essential to encrypting messages. How can two people share the same key without someone else getting a hold of it? Upfront asymmetric encryption is one way, but another is Diffie-Hellman key exchange.
Instructional Video3:54
SciShow

Ancient Plagues & A New Pandemic

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explores the science behind the topics of the day, including a look at the current "pandemic" of concussions in professional sports and new insights into what really caused the worst plagues in human history, and what it portends...
Instructional Video4:57
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why people fall for misinformation | Joseph Isaac

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1901, David Hänig published research that led to what we know today as the taste map: an illustration that divides the tongue into four separate areas. It has since been published in textbooks and newspapers. There is just one...
Instructional Video9:33
TED Talks

Fiorenzo Omenetto: Silk, the ancient material of the future

12th - Higher Ed
Fiorenzo Omenetto shares 20+ astonishing new uses for silk, one of nature's most elegant materials -- in transmitting light, improving sustainability, adding strength and making medical leaps and bounds. On stage, he shows a few...
Instructional Video9:47
SciShow

4 Real Inventions Inspired by Science Fiction

12th - Higher Ed
Where science fiction becomes science fact - that is the place Hank is exploring in today's episode of SciShow. Many inventions we use today were first imagined in stories that described fantastical futures. Hank talks about the origins...
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

There Might be a New Kind of Habitable Planet!

12th - Higher Ed
Extreme environments full of life on Earth have led researchers to expand the definition of habitability to something that includes many more planets, potentially leading us to evidence of living things in a dramatically shorter time!...