Instructional Video17:00
TED Talks

TED: Your brain hallucinates your conscious reality | Anil Seth

12th - Higher Ed
Right now, billions of neurons in your brain are working together to generate a conscious experience -- and not just any conscious experience, your experience of the world around you and of yourself within it. How does this happen?...
Instructional Video2:24
SciShow

Why Doesn't It Get Dark When You Blink?

12th - Higher Ed
Normally when you blink, you don’t really notice, and it turns out your brain is playing a bit of a trick on you to make that happen!
Instructional Video11:01
SciShow

Why These 7 Fish Are So U.G.L.Y.

12th - Higher Ed
Some fish will never win any beauty pageants, but they still deserve our admiration, respect, and love, especially since their “ugly” traits are actually incredible examples of evolutionary innovation.
Instructional Video7:29
Amoeba Sisters

Carbon and Nitrogen Cycles

12th - Higher Ed
Explore the cycling of carbon among carbon reservoirs! Then discover the importance of nitrogen, essential for amino acids and nucleotides, and learn about the nitrogen cycle! Expand details for table of contents. Table of Contents:...
Instructional Video7:23
SciShow

What We Often Get Wrong About the Brain’s 'Language' Centers

12th - Higher Ed
About 150 years ago, scientists found the two main areas that are responsible for language production and comprehension in the brain. But it turns out they might have over-exaggerated what these parts actually do.
Instructional Video14:58
SciShow

This One’s for the Birds: Your Bird Questions, Answered | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
You probably don't think much about birds most of the time, but these little former-dinosaurs are amazing! So, here's a collection of videos in which we've tackled our viewers' biggest bird questions!
Instructional Video4:54
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Joshua W. Pate: The mysterious science of pain

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1995, the British Medical Journal published a report about a builder who accidentally jumped onto a nail, which pierced straight through his steel-toed boot. He was in such agonizing pain that any movement was unbearable. But when the...
Instructional Video0:30
MinutePhysics

Footnote †: Unstable Equilibrium

12th - Higher Ed
This video is a footnote for the video about the ring around the earth: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4xSPlQUejd8 Essentially, a ring around the earth is in unstable equilibrium, so it would stay put, but then fall one way or the other...
Instructional Video21:37
SciShow

Earwax, Butt Hair, and Other Weird Human Attributes

12th - Higher Ed
You can probably tell someone the purpose of most of your body parts. But what about earwax? Or your appendix? If you’re looking for those answers, or wondering why you have a butt, pop a squat to find out about weird human attributes.
Instructional Video18:09
TED Talks

Eva Zeisel: The playful search for beauty

12th - Higher Ed
The ceramics designer Eva Zeisel looks back on a 75-year career. What keeps her work as fresh today (her latest line debuted in 2008) as in 1926? Her sense of play and beauty, and her drive for adventure. Listen for stories from a rich,...
Instructional Video10:04
SciShow

Human-Powered Helicopters and a Red Fox: SciShow Talk Show #8

12th - Higher Ed
Da Vinci imagined a helicopter powered solely by human muscles. Now more than 500 years later, two teams are using advanced materials to try and make that dream come true. Hank and Catilin discuss these two teams and the Sikorsky Prize...
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

Mystery Solved: We Finally Know Why Betelgeuse Suddenly Faded | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Our neighboring star Betelgeuse got noticeably dimmer a few months ago, and thanks to the Hubble telescope, we recently figured out what was going on. Also, the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico suffered some damage this week.
Instructional Video17:39
TED Talks

TED: Where good ideas come from | Steven Johnson

12th - Higher Ed
People often credit their ideas to individual "Eureka!" moments. But Steven Johnson shows how history tells a different story. His fascinating tour takes us from the "liquid networks" of London's coffee houses to Charles Darwin's long,...
Instructional Video9:37
Crash Course

Casual Gaming: Crash Course Games

12th - Higher Ed
Today, we're moving on from game consoles to talk about a bigger shift that was happening in the gaming industry. In the mid 2000s, we saw a proliferation of Internet accessible devices and with them gaming would expand to a new...
Instructional Video9:31
Crash Course

Theories of Gender: Crash Course Sociology

12th - Higher Ed
Why is gender even a thing? To answer that, we’re going back to our three sociological paradigms and how each school of thought approaches gender theory. We’ll look at the structural functionalist view that gender is a way of organizing...
Instructional Video13:46
TED Talks

TED: What farmers need to be modern, climate-friendly and profitable | Beth Ford

12th - Higher Ed
TED talks about what farmers need to be modern, climate-friendly and profitable
Instructional Video3:52
Be Smart

Goats!

12th - Higher Ed
Goats are amazing creatures, but there's a lot more than meets the eye.
Instructional Video5:07
SciShow

Great Minds: Tycho Brahe, the Astronomer With a Pet Elk

12th - Higher Ed
In the late 16th century, Tycho Brahe built an observatory on an island and collecting some of the most accurate data ever. He also lost his nose in a duel with a classmate -- over who was the better mathematician.
Instructional Video2:33
SciShow

Am I 1% Nacho?

12th - Higher Ed
If you weighed 99 lbs, and ate 1 lbs of nachos, would that make you 1% nacho? Hank attempts to answer this question with a series of deeper questions on this episode of SciShow quick questions.
Instructional Video2:46
SciShow

Tatooine Discovered?

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us about NASAs discovery of the 1st planet ever discovered to be orbiting a binary star.
Instructional Video5:41
SciShow

Retracing a Mastodon’s Steps With Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to strontium, oxygen, and rings in a tusk, scientists now have evidence that extinct mastodons may have participated in yearly migrations.
Instructional Video2:34
MinuteEarth

The Plant That’s Full Of Metal

12th - Higher Ed
The amount of metal some special plants are able to take up from the soil would be toxic enough to an average plant to kill it several times over.
Instructional Video10:57
TED Talks

TED: Got millet? How marketing could improve the lives of African farmers | Zoë Karl-Waithaka

12th - Higher Ed
From "got milk?" to "avocados from Mexico," marketing influences what you eat more than you may realize. But despite the known power of food marketing, farmers in Africa are more likely to receive funding for seed and fertilizer than...
Instructional Video3:22
SciShow

A Brand New Type of Brain Cell | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Two teams of scientists in two different parts of the world discovered a previously unknown neuron, which might have a lot to do with what makes humans, human.