Instructional Video4:59
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Does math have a major flaw? | Jacqueline Doan and Alex Kazachek

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A mathematician with a knife and ball begins slicing and distributing the ball into an infinite number of boxes. She then recombines the parts into five precise sections. Moving and rotating these sections around, she recombines them to...
Instructional Video3:41
TED Talks

TED: Why science needs to get behind natural medicine | Jeff Chen

12th - Higher Ed
Pharmaceutical companies often only patent drugs they can monetize, creating synthetic versions of remedies already available in nature. In this quick talk, physician and entrepreneur Jeff Chen offers a path to affordable, effective...
Instructional Video1:20
MinutePhysics

Confessions of a Youtuber

12th - Higher Ed
One Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in one minute!
Instructional Video3:44
SciShow

Astrobiology & the Search for Alien Life

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks about astrobiology - the study of and search for life in the universe off Earth. Right now, the field has more questions than answers, but all they all seek to answer that one fundamental query: are we alone in the universe?
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

More Clues to the Oldest Fossils Ever

12th - Higher Ed
New evidence suggests some fossils as the oldest known sign of life on Earth, and scientists may have a way to speed up the process of carbon neutralization in the ocean!
Instructional Video3:59
SciShow

The 3 Coolest Things Built By Bugs

12th - Higher Ed
Long before there were strip malls, skyscrapers, and combination Pizza Hut/Taco Bells, nature had its own architects: all kinds of creatures create all kinds of structures for living, raising offspring, or maybe just the occasional...
Instructional Video16:01
3Blue1Brown

The Brachistochrone, with Steven Strogatz: Brachistochrone - Part 1 of 2

12th - Higher Ed
A classic problem that Johann Bernoulli posed to famous mathematicians of his time, such as Newton, and how Bernoulli found an incredibly clever solution using properties of light.
Instructional Video16:02
3Blue1Brown

The Brachistochrone, with Steven Strogatz

12th - Higher Ed
A classic problem that Johann Bernoulli posed to famous mathematicians of his time, such as Newton, and how Bernoulli found an incredibly clever solution using properties of light.
Instructional Video12:46
Be Smart

Where Did Life Come From? (feat. PBS Space Time and Eons!)

12th - Higher Ed
The origin of life is one of the most important mysteries in all of science. When did life begin? How did life first evolve from chemistry? Where did life get started? In some primordial soup or somewhere else? Let's journey back to the...
Instructional Video4:24
SciShow

More Clues to the Oldest Fossils Ever

12th - Higher Ed
New evidence suggests some fossils as the oldest known sign of life on Earth, and scientists may have a way to speed up the process of carbon neutralization in the ocean!
Instructional Video3:40
SciShow

Astrobiology & the Search for Alien Life

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks about astrobiology - the study of and search for life in the universe off Earth. Right now, the field has more questions than answers, but all they all seek to answer that one fundamental query: are we alone in the universe?
Instructional Video4:02
SciShow

The 3 Coolest Things Built By Bugs

12th - Higher Ed
Long before there were strip malls, skyscrapers, and combination Pizza Hut/Taco Bells, nature had its own architects: all kinds of creatures create all kinds of structures for living, raising offspring, or maybe just the occasional...
Instructional Video12:18
TED Talks

TED: The virginity fraud | Nina Dolvik Brochmann and ellen Stokken Dahl

12th - Higher Ed
The hymen is still the most misunderstood part of the female body. Nina Dolvik Brochmann and ellen Stokken Dahl share their mission to empower young people through better sex education, debunking the popular (and harmful) myths we're...
Instructional Video14:47
TED Talks

Henry Markram: A brain in a supercomputer

12th - Higher Ed
Henry Markram says the mysteries of the mind can be solved -- soon. Mental illness, memory, perception: they're made of neurons and electric signals, and he plans to find them with a supercomputer that models all the brain's...
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

Pareidolia: Why People Keep Seeing Crazy Stuff on Mars

12th - Higher Ed
Why do people supposedly see a woman in pictures sent from Mars by the Curiosity Rover? For the same reason that people see Pepe the Frog in their toast, or Jesus in a tortilla: a phenomenon known as pareidolia.
Instructional Video6:50
SciShow

When Athletes Dope ... & Einstein FTW

12th - Higher Ed
This week's SciShow news has Hank bringing us a primer on the science behind various illegal and illicit ways in which athletes "improve" their bodies, proof of general relativity that we can actually see, and a new way to measure how...
Instructional Video9:31
MinutePhysics

The No Cloning Theorem

12th - Higher Ed
Why you can’t clone Schrödinger’s cat: this video presents the full proof of the “No Cloning” Theorem in Quantum Mechanics – without any fancy math! (stereotypical qubit has been replaced with Schrödinger’s cat). The full proof relies on...
Instructional Video16:26
TED Talks

Michael Specter: The danger of science denial

12th - Higher Ed
Vaccine-autism claims, "Frankenfood" bans, the herbal cure craze: All point to the public's growing fear (and, often, outright denial) of science and reason, says Michael Specter. He warns the trend spells disaster for human progress.
Instructional Video4:07
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you outsmart the fallacy that started a witch hunt? | Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's 1950. Anti-communist sentiment in the United States is at an all-time high. Senator Joseph McCarthy claims he has a list of communists who are influencing government policy. He makes his first accusation without providing any...
Instructional Video16:23
TED Talks

TED: What's so sexy about math? | Cedric Villani

12th - Higher Ed
Hidden truths permeate our world; they're inaccessible to our senses, but math allows us to go beyond our intuition to uncover their mysteries. In this survey of mathematical breakthroughs, Fields Medal winner Cedric Villani speaks to...
Instructional Video4:30
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How to prove a mathematical theory - Scott Kennedy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Euclid of Alexandria revolutionized the way that mathematics is written, presented or thought about, and introduced the concept of mathematical proofs. Discover what it takes to move from a loose theory or idea to a universally...
Instructional Video4:41
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Making sense of irrational numbers - Ganesh Pai

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Like many heroes of Greek myths, the philosopher Hippasus was rumored to have been mortally punished by the gods. But what was his crime? Did he murder guests or disrupt a sacred ritual? No, Hippasus's transgression was mathematically...
Instructional Video4:41
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How can you change someone's mind? (hint: facts aren't always enough) - Hugo Mercier

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Why do arguments change people's minds in some cases and backfire in others? Hugo Mercier explains how arguments are more convincing when they rest on a good knowledge of the audience, taking into account what the audience believes, who...
Instructional Video5:13
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How many ways are there to prove the Pythagorean theorem? - Betty Fei

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What do Euclid, 12-year-old Einstein, and American President James Garfield have in common? They all came up with elegant proofs for the famous Pythagorean theorem, one of the most fundamental rules of geometry and the basis for...