Instructional Video6:20
TED Talks

Bridging the Divide: Emerging Leaders, Political Polarization, and the Future of U.S. Democracy

12th - Higher Ed
President and founder of Eurasia Group and GZERO Media Ian Bremmer discusses the potential for emerging leaders in American politics who can build bridges, citing a few modern figures as examples. While he acknowledges a new generation...
Instructional Video14:50
TED Talks

TED: How to fight for democracy in the shadow of autocracy | Fatma Karume

12th - Higher Ed
Democracy may be an abstract concept, but it holds the very essence of our autonomy and humanity, says lawyer and human rights advocate Fatma Karume. Sharing her journey navigating a tumultuous political transition in Tanzania that put...
Instructional Video4:08
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the secret assassin society riddle? | Alex Rosenthal

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Your agent has infiltrated a life or death poker game in a hidden back room of a grand casino. Your team is on the trail of an elite society of assassins, each of whom carries a signature playing card corresponding to their role—...
Instructional Video14:25
TED Talks

TED: The ordinary people doing extraordinary things in Ukraine | Oleksandra Matviichuk

12th - Higher Ed
How do we defend people's freedom and dignity against authoritarianism, when the "law of war" doesn't seem to apply anymore? In the face of the Russian occupation of Ukraine, human rights lawyer and Nobel laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk...
Instructional Video2:18
SciShow

Is the Five-Second Rule Real?

12th - Higher Ed
Oops! You drop your precious midnight snack on the floor! You just picked it up really quick, like less than five seconds, so it is ok to eat, right? But is the 5-second rule really legit? Hosted by: Michael Aranda ----------
News Clip2:42
Curated Video

Kerry on ASEAN, sustainability, S China Sea

Higher Ed
US Secretary of State John Kerry spoke of the high regard his nation held for the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) bloc as he addressed a news conference at the summit in Vientiane, Laos on Tuesday.Kerry also stated the...
News Clip3:10
Curated Video

Opening arguments in Supreme Court over Guantanamo detainee

Higher Ed
AP Television 1. Exterior of Supreme Court 2. People walking by Supreme Court 3. Statue outside Supreme Court - pull out to show crowds ++AUDIO OVERLAID WITH COURT SKETCHES - MUST COURTESY: Sketches by Ari Hennessey++ 4. SOUNDBITE:...
Instructional Video12:17
3Blue1Brown

Cramer's rule, explained geometrically | Essence of linear algebra, chapter 12

12th - Higher Ed
What Cramer's rule is, and a geometric reason it's true
Instructional Video12:02
Crash Course

The Apocalyspe: Crash Course World Mythology

12th - Higher Ed
Mike Rugnetta is going to tell you stories of death, destruction, divine judgment, damnation, and the occasional happy ending. That's right, this week we're talking about the Apocalypse. Actually we're talking about a bunch of ways the...
Instructional Video10:49
Be Smart

How Some Words Get Forgetted

12th - Higher Ed
English is a confusing language for many reasons. But the irregular verbs might be the most confusing part. Why is "told" the past tense of "tell" but "smold" isn't the past tense of "smell"? It turns out that the study of irregular...
Instructional Video4:28
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Do larger animals take longer to pee? | David L. Hu

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A cat's bladder can only store a golf ball's worth of urine. For humans, it's a coffee mug and for elephants, a kitchen trash can. An elephant's bladder is 400 times the size of a cat's, but it doesn't take an elephant 400 times longer...
Instructional Video16:51
3Blue1Brown

Visualizing the chain rule and product rule | Chapter 4, Essence of calculus

12th - Higher Ed
The product rule and chain rule in calculus can feel like they were pulled out of thin air, but is there an intuitive way to think about them?
Instructional Video11:50
3Blue1Brown

Cramer's rule, explained geometrically: Essence of Linear Algebra - Part 12 of 15

12th - Higher Ed
This rule seems random to many students, but it has a beautiful reason for being true.
Instructional Video5:06
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How to make your writing funnier - Cheri Steinkellner

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Did you ever notice how many jokes start with _Did you ever notice?" And what's the deal with "What's the deal?" There's a lot of funny to be found simply by noticing the ordinary, everyday things you don't ordinarily notice every day....
Instructional Video19:55
TED Talks

TED: Computing a theory of all knowledge | Stephen Wolfram

12th - Higher Ed
Stephen Wolfram, creator of Mathematica, talks about his quest to make all knowledge computational -- able to be searched, processed and manipulated. His new search engine, Wolfram Alpha, has no lesser goal than to model and explain the...
Instructional Video2:45
SciShow

Is the Five-Second Rule Real?

12th - Higher Ed
Oops! You drop your precious midnight snack on the floor! You just picked it up really quick, like less than five seconds, so it is ok to eat, right? But is the 5-second rule really legit?
Instructional Video18:48
TED Talks

Yasheng Huang: Does democracy stifle economic growth?

12th - Higher Ed
Economist Yasheng Huang compares China to India, and asks how China's authoritarian rule contributed to its astonishing economic growth -- leading to a big question: Is democracy actually holding India back? Huang's answer may surprise you.
Instructional Video15:32
TED Talks

TED: A different understanding of American patriotism | Deval Patrick

12th - Higher Ed
American democracy cannot be great until it is good, says lawyer, Harvard professor and former governor of Massachusetts Deval Patrick. A self-identified patriot, Patrick stands behind the fundamental values and civic ideals that he...
Instructional Video4:19
SciShow

Why a Bad Series Finale Ruins the Whole Show

12th - Higher Ed
Objectively, some shows end with rough final acts, but we are finding that this isn’t the only factor in our discontent. Unsatisfactory finales also reflect common types of relationships we build with fictional characters.
Instructional Video4:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The forgotten queen of Egypt | Abdallah Ewis

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The year is 1249 CE. King Louis IX is sailing the Nile, threatening to overthrow the sultan and capture Egypt. Egypt's commanders ask the sultan's wife, Shajar Al-Durr, to report this news to the injured sultan. But they don't know the...
Instructional Video10:51
TED Talks

TED: What intelligent machines can learn from a school of fish | Radhika Nagpal

12th - Higher Ed
Science fiction visions of the future show us AI built to replicate our way of thinking -- but what if we modeled it instead on the other kinds of intelligence found in nature? Robotics engineer Radhika Nagpal studies the collective...
Instructional Video7:22
SciShow

Alcohol Can Enhance Creativity - But at a Cost

12th - Higher Ed
As some say, "write drunk, and edit sober," many writers and artists use alcohol to try to get their creative juices flowing. But can alcohol really help to be more creative?
Instructional Video5:36
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: History vs. Tamerlane the Conqueror | Stephanie Honchell Smith

Pre-K - Higher Ed
He was born in the 1330s in the Chaghatayid Khanate, formerly the Mongol Empire. On the steppe, he rose from a lowly sheep thief to become one of history's greatest conquerors, uniting nearly all of Central Asia, Afghanistan, and Iran...
Instructional Video4:00
SciShow

Animals Getting Bigger, and How Cannabis Causes Hunger

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News delves into the history of marine animals and finds that they’re getting bigger, and unlocks the secret of how cannabis creates one of its most medically useful effects.