Instructional Video5:10
Be Smart

Why Did We Blow On Nintendo Games?

12th - Higher Ed
If you played NES, you did it too. Did it work?
Instructional Video4:37
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the rebel supplies riddle? - Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You're overseeing the delivery of supplies to a rebel base in the heart of enemy territory. To get past customs, all packages must follow this rule: if a box is marked with an even number on the bottom, it must be sealed with a red top....
Instructional Video5:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you outsmart the fallacy that fooled a generation of doctors? | Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's 1843, and a debate is raging about one of the most common killers of women: childbed fever— no one knows what causes it. One physician has observed patients with inflammation go on to develop childbed fever, and therefore believes...
Instructional Video3:28
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you outsmart this logical fallacy? | Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Meet Lucy. She was a math major in college, and aced all her courses in probability and statistics. Which do you think is more likely: that Lucy is a portrait artist, or that Lucy is a portrait artist who also plays poker? How do we know...
Instructional Video4:22
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you outsmart the fallacy that divided a nation? | Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's 1819. The US is preparing to make Missouri and Maine new states. One representative insists that slavery shouldn't be allowed in any new state. Another believes it should be a state's right to choose. A compromise is proposed:...
Instructional Video2:40
The Daily Conversation

The Future of World Religion (in 2050)

6th - Higher Ed
New ReviewBy 2050, the number of Muslims around the world will nearly equal the number of Christians, as Islam will grow faster than any other major world religion.
Instructional Video1:46
Curated Video

Identifying Fallacies

9th - Higher Ed
A video titled "Identifying Fallacies" that explains how to identify logical fallacies in writing.
Instructional Video3:26
Curated Video

Spotting Logical Fallacies: A Guide to Critical Thinking

12th - Higher Ed
This video explains logical fallacies, which are errors in reasoning that make arguments invalid. It gives examples of common fallacies such as false cause, straw man, begging the question, and false dilemma. By learning to spot these...
Instructional Video10:27
Professor Dave Explains

Logical Fallacies Part 2: Most Commonly Used Fallacies

9th - Higher Ed
We just learned about formal and informal fallacies. Now it's time to go through a list of the most common types of fallacies, so that we can be familiar with as many of them as possible. These would be things like the No True Scotsman...
Instructional Video6:34
Professor Dave Explains

Logical Fallacies Part 1: Formal and Informal Fallacies

9th - Higher Ed
In learning about logic, we've come to understand how an argument involves two or more premises followed by a conclusion. When the conclusion does not follow from the premises, this is an invalid argument. In such a case, a logical...
Instructional Video1:11
The Business Professor

Base Rate Fallacy

Higher Ed
What is Base Rate Fallacy? The base rate fallacy, also called base rate neglect or base rate bias, is a type of fallacy in which people tend to ignore the base rate in favor of the individuating information. Base rate neglect is a...
Instructional Video5:25
Curated Video

What is Sunk Cost? ...and the Sunk Cost Fallacy?

10th - Higher Ed
What is Sunk Cost? And what is the Sunk Cost Trap, or the Sunk Cost Fallacy? Sunk Cost is a concept that is important to project management, and in this video, I'll tell you what it is. Sunk Cost is the investment (of money, resources,...
Instructional Video3:52
Curated Video

What we see... Confirmation Bias | Bite Sized Project Management Thought from John Lubbock

10th - Higher Ed
Confirmation bias is dangerous for us, as Project managers. "What we see depends mainly on what we look for" John Lubbock, 1st Baron Avebury (politician and polymath) In this statement, he anticipated the research onto Confirmation Bias...
Instructional Video10:00
Communication Coach Alex Lyon

Logical Fallacies Explained

Higher Ed
Hear the Top 7 Logical Fallacies Explained with examples. Be sure not to use these or you'll hurt your own credibility. Be on the lookout for them when other people use these fallacies.
Instructional Video7:40
Primer

How I deceived myself

12th - Higher Ed
How I deceived myself
Instructional Video1:11
The Business Professor

Base Rate Fallacy

Higher Ed
What is Base Rate Fallacy? The base rate fallacy, also called base rate neglect or base rate bias, is a type of fallacy in which people tend to ignore the base rate in favor of the individuating information. Base rate neglect is a...
Instructional Video4:01
Curated Video

Beyond One Model

12th - Higher Ed
Nobel Laureate Antony Leggett details the logical fallacy of "affirming the consequent", stressing that we must always make sure that another model might explain the phenomenon in question, giving a concrete example to illustrate his point.
Instructional Video2:15
Curated Video

Ignoring Alternatives

12th - Higher Ed
Nobel Laureate in Physics Anthony Leggett (Illinois) describes how finding experimental support for a given theory doesn't mean that there aren't also alternative explanations out there.
Instructional Video8:50
Organizational Communication Channel

Logical Fallacies Top 6

Higher Ed
Here are the Top 6 Logical Fallacies to keep in mind in group and team discussions. Knowing these will help group members with critical thinking and analytical skills. We'll look at the following fallacies: 1. Casual fallacy 2. Either/or...
Instructional Video18:50
Institute for New Economic Thinking

Peter Temin: Lessons from the Great Depression

Higher Ed
George Santayana once wrote that those who could not remember the past were condemned to repeat it. And looking at today’s policy makers at work seeking to combat the huge challenge of unemployment in the aftermath of the Great Financial...
Instructional Video5:20
Neuro Transmissions

Why Is 280 Characters So Long?

12th - Higher Ed
Twitter recently rolled out a longer tweet length. 280 characters! So much room for activities! A friend of mine asked a good question about why such a small expansion feels like SO MUCH. I thought it was an interesting idea and decided...
Instructional Video3:06
Economics Explained

Is War Good For The Economy?: Dead Money

6th - 11th
Can wars end economic decline? It may have helped in the past, but can it help today? Helping you become more knowledgeable about how the world works, our content covers the biggest topics and headlines through the eyes of economists....
Instructional Video3:41
Curated Video

The Sunk Cost Fallacy: Why We Hold onto Things We Should Let Go Of

Higher Ed
The video discusses the sunk cost fallacy, which is the tendency to continue investing in something because of the resources already invested, even if it no longer makes rational sense. The fallacy is driven by loss aversion, the desire...
Instructional Video18:30
Zach Star

This is How Easy It Is to Lie With Statistics

12th - Higher Ed
This is How Easy It Is to Lie With Statistics