Instructional Video10:35
TED Talks

How a strong creative industry helps economies thrive | Mehret Mandefro

12th - Higher Ed
When global leaders think about which industries can fuel economic growth, the arts are often overlooked. But filmmaker Mehret Mandefro says the creative sector actually has the power to grow economies -- while also helping safeguard...
Instructional Video2:01
SciShow

Does Thinking Hard Burn More Calories?

12th - Higher Ed
Your brain uses tons of calories, just in its daily work of keeping you alive. So does thinking extra hard use even MORE calories? QQ fills you in!
Instructional Video12:23
TED Talks

Douglas Rushkoff: How to be "Team Human" in the digital future

12th - Higher Ed
Humans are no longer valued for our creativity, says media theorist Douglas Rushkoff -- in a world dominated by digital technology, we're now just valued for our data. In a passionate talk, Rushkoff urges us to stop using technology to...
Instructional Video3:41
SciShow Kids

Why Don’t Animals Need Sunscreen?

K - 5th
You should always wear sunscreen when you're playing outside, but you may have noticed that animals are outside all the time and they don't need sunscreen. Why?
Instructional Video9:30
Crash Course

German Expressionism: Crash Course Film History

12th - Higher Ed
We've spent a lot of time focusing on France and the U.S. as that's where a significant amount of both infrastructure and business models were initially set up for film. But there were other countries adding their own stories to the...
Instructional Video4:18
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Notes of a native son: the world according to James Baldwin - Christina Greer

Pre-K - Higher Ed
James Baldwin was an American novelist and social critic whose essays in “Notes of a Native Son” explored race, sex and class distinctions. -- In the 1960s, the FBI amassed almost 2,000 documents in an investigation into one of America’s...
Instructional Video10:21
TED Talks

P.J. Parmar: How doctors can help low-income patients (and still make a profit)

12th - Higher Ed
Modern American health care is defined by its high costs, high overhead and inaccessibility -- especially for low-income patients. What if we could redesign the system to serve the poor and still have doctors make money? In an...
Instructional Video4:29
TED Talks

TED: The shocking move to criminalize nonviolent protest | Will Potter

12th - Higher Ed
In 2002, investigative journalist and TED Fellow Will Potter took a break from his regular beat, writing about shootings and murders for the Chicago Tribune. He went to help a local group campaigning against animal testing: "I thought it...
Instructional Video10:00
Crash Course

How Does the Earth Move Crash Course Geography

12th - Higher Ed
Today, we're going to talk about how the Earth moves, but to do that, we're going to have to go way back to the early days of the galaxy! Processes that happened before the Earth even formed have led us to the geographic patterns and...
Instructional Video5:56
SciShow

How Pluto’s Heart Makes Its Atmosphere Spin Backward - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Pluto's heart is revealing itself to be a major influence on the dwarf planet’s landscape and atmosphere, and scientists used atom probe tomography (APT) for the first time on lunar soil to study it atom by atom!
Instructional Video3:11
MinutePhysics

How Do Airplanes Fly?

12th - Higher Ed
How Do Airplanes Fly?
Instructional Video4:37
SciShow

Walrus Flash Mob & 20 Years of Pot Research

12th - Higher Ed
35,000 walruses all hanging out at the same beach in Alaska? Why? Does global warming have anything to do with it? And what have we learned after 20 years of studying the effects of marijuana? SciShow News explains.
Instructional Video5:34
SciShow

When Your Brain Can’t Accept Reality: Anosognosia

12th - Higher Ed
If patients seem to be unaware of their obvious conditions and symptoms, it might not be that they're in denial, but their brain might actually prevent them from realizing their disabilities.
Instructional Video7:46
TED Talks

Jon Nguyen: Tour the solar system from home

12th - Higher Ed
Want to navigate the solar system without having to buy a spacecraft? Jon Nguyen demos NASA JPL's "Eyes on the Solar System" -- free-to-use software for exploring the planets, moons, asteroids, and spacecraft that rotate around our sun...
Instructional Video3:31
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The exceptional life of Benjamin Banneker - Rose-Margaret Ekeng-Itua

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Born in 1731 to freed slaves on a farm in Baltimore, Benjamin Banneker was obsessed with math and science. And his appetite for knowledge only grew as he taught himself astronomy, mathematics, engineering, and the study of the natural...
Instructional Video5:43
PBS

That Time Oxygen Almost Killed Everything

12th - Higher Ed
What if we told you that there was a time when oxygen almost wiped out all life on Earth? 3 billion years ago, when the world was a place you'd never recognize, too much of a good thing almost ruined everything for everybody.
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

400 Million New Stars in Our Galaxy!

12th - Higher Ed
The Gaia space observatory released a detailed 3d map of the Milky Way, and scientists have figured out why Charon's north pole is red!
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

News Bummers Poison Fog Sad Sperm & SAM

12th - Higher Ed
Hank loves science because it helps us appreciate the world more, but not everything that science does makes him happy - reports of poison fog on the West coast of the United States; dramatic decreases in sperm counts; and a lack of...
Instructional Video8:18
SciShow

Sleep: Why We Need It and What Happens Without It

12th - Higher Ed
What happens when you don't sleep? And why do we need to do it anyways? Hank explains the science of sleep: the cause, the benefits, and who holds the record for going without it!
Instructional Video3:51
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The benefits of daydreaming | Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
On a daily basis, you spend between a third and half of your waking hours daydreaming. That may sound like a huge waste of time, but scientists think it must have some purpose, or humans wouldn't have evolved to do so much of it. So,...
Instructional Video4:19
SciShow Kids

Why Do We Dream?

K - 5th
Jessi had the weirdest dream last night and wants to share with you why our brains make dreams.
Instructional Video4:58
SciShow

What Squids and Frogs Taught Us About How Brain Cells Talk

12th - Higher Ed
Back in the early days of neuroscience, we didn't study the animals you might expect to learn about how brain cells communicate.
Instructional Video4:23
TED Talks

Alexis Ohanian: How to make a splash in social media

12th - Higher Ed
In a funny, rapid-fire 4 minutes, Alexis Ohanian of Reddit tells the real-life fable of one humpback whale's rise to web stardom. The lesson of Mister Splashy Pants is a shoo-in classic for meme-makers and marketers in the Facebook age.
Instructional Video9:51
TED Talks

TED: Why we need to rethink capitalism | Paul Tudor Jones II

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Tudor Jones II loves capitalism. It's a system that has done him very well over the last few decades. Nonetheless, the hedge fund manager and philanthropist is concerned that a laser focus on profits is, as he puts it, "threatening...