Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

Why Are There So Many Beetles

12th - Higher Ed
Beetles are the most diverse group of complex organisms on Earth, making up over 20% of all named animal species. One in five species on this planet is...a beetle. How did one group of organisms get THAT massive?
Instructional Video10:07
Crash Course

Climate Change, Chaos, and The Little Ice Age - Crash Course World History 206

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you about the Little Ice Age. The Little Ice Age was a period of global cooling that occurred from the 13th to the 19th centuries. This cooling was likely caused by a number of factors, including unusual solar...
Instructional Video11:47
SciShow

6 Lonely Branches on the Tree of Life

12th - Higher Ed
When there’s only one species on an evolutionary branch, we call it a monospecific taxon. Studying these special species can help us better understand not just those sparse groups, but all life on this planet. Chapters Homo sapiens 0:53...
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow Kids

Mysterious Trilobites! | The History of Life! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks and Mister Brown pretend to go back in time to learn more about Trilobites, using special clues from fossils! Second Grade Next Generation Science Standards Crosscutting Concepts Patterns: Observed patterns in nature guide...
Instructional Video5:55
Crash Course Kids

Weather In Space (the Rocky Planets)

3rd - 8th
Do other planets have weather? It turns out that, yes, they do! But, the weather isn't all the same on other planets because of things like atmosphere. In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina takes us on a tour of the weather on...
Instructional Video7:49
PBS

The Higgs Mechanism Explained

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum Field Theory is generally accepted as an accurate description of the subatomic universe. However until recently this theory had one giant hole in it. The particles it describes had no mass!
Instructional Video10:55
Curated Video

The Renaissance Was it a Thing - Crash Course World History

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you about the European Renaissance. European learning changed the world in the 15th and 16th century, but was it a cultural revolution, or an evolution? We'd argue that any cultural shift that occurs over a...
Instructional Video4:41
SciShow

Can Climate Change Make Lightning… Supercharged?

12th - Higher Ed
The oceans absorb a lot of CO2, leading to a variety of effects like ocean acidification. But you might not expect one of those effects: stronger lightning strikes.
Instructional Video11:46
PBS

Proving Pick's Theorem

12th - Higher Ed
What is Pick's Theorem and how can we prove it?
Instructional Video10:42
TED Talks

Joseph DeSimone: What if 3D printing was 100x faster?

12th - Higher Ed
What we think of as 3D printing, says Joseph DeSimone, is really just 2D printing over and over ... slowly. Onstage at TED2015, he unveils a bold new technique -- inspired, yes, by Terminator 2 -- that's 25 to 100 times faster, and...
Instructional Video4:28
TED Talks

TED: Everyday objects, tragic histories | Ziyah Gafić

12th - Higher Ed
Ziyah Gafić photographs everyday objects—watches, shoes, glasses. But these images are deceptively simple; the items in them have been exhumed from the mass graves of the Bosnian War. Gafić, a TED Fellow and Sarajevo native, is...
Instructional Video3:49
SciShow

Nobel News Capturing Photons Cloning Frogs

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings us the news about the new Nobel Prize winners in the sciences, what they won for and what it all means.
Instructional Video16:37
TED Talks

Rob Reid: How synthetic biology could wipe out humanity -- and how we can stop it

12th - Higher Ed
The world-changing promise of synthetic biology and gene editing has a dark side. In this far-seeing talk, author and entrepreneur Rob Reid reviews the risks of a world where more and more people have access to the tools and tech needed...
Instructional Video4:37
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The power of the placebo effect - Emma Bryce

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The placebo effect is an unexplained phenomenon wherein drugs, treatments, and therapies that aren't supposed to have an effect -- and are often fake -- miraculously make people feel better. What's going on? Emma Bryce dives into the...
Instructional Video6:48
Be Smart

Theory vs Hypothesis vs Law

12th - Higher Ed
Some people try to attack things like evolution by natural selection and man-made climate change by saying "Oh, that's just a THEORY!" Yes, they are both theories. Stop saying it like it's a bad thing! It's time we learn the difference...
Instructional Video3:14
SciShow

3 New Discoveries in Space

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares three cool discoveries in space science, including a celestial crucible of phosphorous, noble gases found in a supernova, and plumes of water vapor on Europa.
Instructional Video5:41
SciShow

How Stars Freeze

12th - Higher Ed
When you think of a frozen object in space, you might think of Pluto, but stars themselves actually freeze.
Instructional Video13:10
Crash Course

Life Begins Crash Course Big History 4

12th - Higher Ed
In which Hank and John Green teach you about life on Earth. They won't be giving advice on how life should be lived, because this is a history series. Instead, they'll teach you about the earliest forms of life on Earth, and some of the...
Instructional Video16:13
TED Talks

TED: The counterintuitive psychology of insurance | Orit Tykocinski

12th - Higher Ed
The real reason you buy insurance may have as much to do with pleasing your psyche as it does protecting your wallet. Behavioral psychologist Orit Tykocinski explores the connection between insurance and the reality-distorting risks of...
Instructional Video8:24
Crash Course

Board Games: Crash Course Games

12th - Higher Ed
Today, we're going to talk about board games, but instead of trying to trace their histories, which we've already covered a bit of in ep2 on ancient games, we're going to look really closely at just two board games - Monopoly and The...
Instructional Video5:06
SciShow

Tapputi-Belatekallim: The First Chemical Engineer | Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
A perfumer from Ancient Babylon named Tapputi-Belatekallim is possibly history's first recorded chemist, and some of the techniques she used are still in practice today.
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

Why It Might Be Good to Have Herpes | Trained Immunity

12th - Higher Ed
While herpes viruses cause harmful or annoying afflictions like chickenpox and cold sores, there’s also evidence it can help your immune system fight unrelated attackers.
Instructional Video5:40
PBS

Is Doctor Who a Religion?

12th - Higher Ed
Dr. Who is one of the longest running TV shows on the BBC, and it's got a huge fandom surrounding it, called Whovians. And while it might not seem like, Whovianism, might just be religion! Whovians, like other passionate fan cultures,...
Instructional Video4:51
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do buildings fall in earthquakes? - Vicki V. May

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Earthquakes have always been a terrifying phenomenon, and they've become more deadly as our cities have grown - with collapsing buildings posing one of the largest risks. But why do buildings collapse in an earthquake? And how can it be...