Instructional Video2:39
MinuteEarth

How Your Dog Can Protect You Before You're Born

12th - Higher Ed
Herein we explain how pets can help your immune system, beginning when you're in utero!
Instructional Video3:44
SciShow

Bigfoot, Yeti: Meet Science

12th - Higher Ed
This week in SciShow News, hard science meets cryptozoology, as biologists reveal the results of their investigation into samples suspected to have come from such beasties as Sasquatch and yeti. The findings are pretty much what you'd...
Instructional Video9:33
TED Talks

TED: How (and why) Russia hacked the uS election | Laura Galante

12th - Higher Ed
Hacking, fake news, information bubbles ... all these and more have become part of the vernacular in recent years. But as cyberspace analyst Laura Galante describes in this alarming talk, the real target of anyone looking to influence...
Instructional Video3:14
SciShow

How Anglerfishes Become One With Their Partners

12th - Higher Ed
Anglerfishes are pretty unique creatures, but what’s really unique is how some of these species mate.
Instructional Video16:31
TED Talks

TED: New rules for rebuilding a broken nation | Paul Collier

12th - Higher Ed
Long conflict can wreck a country, leaving behind poverty and chaos. But what's the right way to help war-torn countries rebuild? At TED@State, Paul Collier explains the problems with current post-conflict aid plans, and suggests 3 ideas...
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

What Do We Know About T Cells and COVID-19 Immunity? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
There's another theory about the Covid-19 pandemic going around, and while it is pretty cool, it's not exactly the solution some are suggesting it might be.
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

How a Century-Old Procedure Could Help Us Fight COVID-19

12th - Higher Ed
Some potentially good news on the COVID-19 treatment front: Thanks to a technique that’s more than a century old, recovered COVID-19 patients may be in a position to help the rest of us -- with their blood plasma.
Instructional Video7:50
TED Talks

4 lessons the pandemic taught us about work, life and balance | Patty McCord

12th - Higher Ed
The COVID-19 pandemic changed the way we work for good. Can it also change it for the better? Consultant Patty McCord reviews four key insights employers and employees alike gleaned from their shift to working from home -- and shares how...
Instructional Video4:29
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Who was Confucius? - Bryan W. Van Norden

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Most people recognize his name and know that he is famous for having said something, but considering the long-lasting impact his teachings have had on the world, very few people know who Confucius really was, what he really said and why....
Instructional Video5:22
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why elephants never forget - Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's a common saying that elephants never forget. But the more we learn about elephants, the more it appears that their impressive memory is only one aspect of an incredible intelligence that makes them some of the most social, creative,...
Instructional Video7:35
Bozeman Science

Concept 1 - Patterns

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains patterns and describes why pattern recognition is an important skill in science and engineering. He begins by discussing patterns in nature, including snowflakes, flower petals, seasons and nucleotides in DNA. He...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How computers translate human language - Ioannis Papachimonas

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Is a universal translator possible in real life? We already have many programs that claim to be able to take a word, sentence, or entire book in one language and translate it into almost any other. The reality, however, is a bit more...
Instructional Video7:35
TED Talks

TED: How we can help hungry kids, one text at a time | Su Kahumbu

12th - Higher Ed
Su Kahumbu raises badass cows -- healthy, well-fed animals whose protein is key to solving a growing crisis in Africa: childhood nutritional stunting. With iCow, a simple SMS service she developed to support small-scale livestock...
Instructional Video7:11
SciShow

Fish Are Way Smarter Than You Think

12th - Higher Ed
Many people assume that fish are less intelligent than mammals, but it turns out that isn’t true at all - they are actually way smarter than you probably give them credit for.
Instructional Video10:23
SciShow

The End of Everything

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us an inclusive overview of how everything in the universe is thought to have begun, and how cosmologists predict it will all come to an end. Now get happy!
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

The Secret to Becoming Immune to Mosquito Bites

12th - Higher Ed
Like most allergies, you can become immune to mosquito bites, but it might not be worth it.
Instructional Video5:04
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Would you raise the bird that murdered your children? | Steve Rothstein

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A mother honeyguide has placed its chick into a bee-eater's nest— puncturing all the other eggs in the nest and leaving only its own hatching alive. Over the following weeks, the host parents devotedly care for the hatchling whose mother...
Instructional Video8:16
TED Talks

Danielle N. Lee: How hip-hop helps us understand science

12th - Higher Ed
In the early 1990s, a scandal rocked evolutionary biology: scientists discovered that songbirds -- once thought to be strictly monogamous -- engaged in what's politely called "extra-pair copulation." In this unforgettable biology lesson...
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

Magic Isn't Magic: It's Psychology

12th - Higher Ed
Magicians have a handy ace up their sleeve: Your brain, and they're not the only ones who know how to use it.
Instructional Video5:34
TED Talks

TED: The surprising spread of Idol TV | Cynthia Schneider

12th - Higher Ed
Cynthia Schneider looks at two international "American Idol"-style shows -- one in Afghanistan, and one in the United Arab Emirates -- and shows the surprising effect that these reality-TV competitions are creating in their societies.
Instructional Video12:42
Be Smart

Does Someone Else Have Your Face?

12th - Higher Ed
They say everyone has a doppelganger, but is that really true? This week we meet a young woman who found her own look-alike, and figure out how we actually recognize faces.
Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is a coronavirus?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
For almost a decade, scientists chased the source of a deadly new virus through China’s tallest mountains and most isolated caverns. They finally found it in the bats of Shitou Cave. The virus in question was a coronavirus that caused an...
Instructional Video16:26
3Blue1Brown

But what is a Neural Network? Deep learning - Part 1 of 4

12th - Higher Ed
An overview of what a neural network is, introduced in the context of recognizing hand-written digits.
Instructional Video10:06
TED Talks

TED: Why jobs of the future won't feel like work | David Lee

12th - Higher Ed
We've all heard that robots are going to take our jobs -- but what can we do about it? Innovation expert David Lee says that we should start designing jobs that unlock our hidden talents and passions -- the things we spend our weekends...