News Clip4:01
Curated Video

US adventurer to continue search for MH370

Higher Ed
American adventurer Blaine Gibson says he will continue to search for debris and for clues on the disappearance Malaysia Airlines flight 370.Gibson spoke recently with the AP in Canberra, Australia, where he and relatives of some of...
Instructional Video4:49
Bozeman Science

Systems and Objects

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the differences between a system and an object. Depending on the scale it often times easies to view a system as an object if the constituent parts aren't relevant to the question being asked. He also...
Instructional Video5:53
Bozeman Science

Symbolic Representations

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the conservation of matter can be displayed with both symbolic representations and particulate drawings. A simple conservation of matter problem is also included.
Instructional Video10:59
TED Talks

What is deep tech? A look at how it could shape the future | Antoine Gourévitch

12th - Higher Ed
How do companies like SpaceX make sudden breakthroughs on decades-old challenges? Emerging tech expert Antoine Gourévitch explains how deep tech -- a new approach to innovation that merges science, engineering and design thinking -- is...
Instructional Video8:14
TED Talks

Kristen Wenz: What if a single human right could change the world?

12th - Higher Ed
More than a billion people worldwide, mostly children, do not have a legal identity. In many countries, this means they can't get access to vital services like health care and education, says legal identity expert Kristen Wenz. She...
Instructional Video7:04
TED Talks

Jeanne Pinder: What if all US health care costs were transparent?

12th - Higher Ed
In the US, the very same blood test can cost $19 at one clinic and $522 at another clinic just blocks away -- and nobody knows the difference until they get a bill weeks later. Journalist Jeanne Pinder says it doesn't have to be this...
Instructional Video2:44
MinuteEarth

We're Oversalting Our Food, And It's Not What You Think

12th - Higher Ed
Want to learn more about the topic in this week's video? Here are some keywords/phrases to get your googling started: soil salinity - when soils have high salt levels that have adverse effects on plants
Instructional Video13:58
3Blue1Brown

Binary, Hanoi and Sierpinski, part 1

12th - Higher Ed
How couting in binary can solve the famous tower's of hanoi problem.
Instructional Video3:23
Bozeman Science

Q10 - The Temperature Coefficient

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen defines Q10 as the ratio between reactions at different temperatures. He then gives you an example of how it could be calculated. He also includes extensions of other scientific phenomenon that could created...
Instructional Video3:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man of math - James Earle

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What's so special about Leonard da Vinci's Vitruvian Man? With arms outstretched, the man fills the irreconcilable spaces of a circle and a square -- symbolizing the Renaissance-era belief in the mutable nature of humankind. James Earle...
Instructional Video13:29
TED Talks

Sonaar Luthra: We need to track the world's water like we track the weather

12th - Higher Ed
We need a global weather service for water, says entrepreneur and TED Fellow Sonaar Luthra. In a talk about environmental accountability, Luthra shows how we could forecast water shortages and risks with a global data collection effort...
Instructional Video12:18
3Blue1Brown

Binary, Hanoi and Sierpinski - Part 1 of 2

12th - Higher Ed
How couting in binary can solve the famous tower's of hanoi problem.
Instructional Video10:41
Crash Course

Cognition: How Your Mind Can Amaze and Betray You - Crash Course Psychology

12th - Higher Ed
We used to think that the human brain was a lot like a computer; using logic to figure out complicated problems. It turns out, it's a lot more complex and, well, weird than that. In this episode of Crash Course Psychology, Hank discusses...
Instructional Video12:38
TED Talks

The people who caused the climate crisis aren't the ones who will fix it | Angela Mahecha Adrar

12th - Higher Ed
Corporations and big business have wrecked the environment, but disadvantaged communities living in "sacrifice zones" -- urban areas heavily polluted and poisoned by industry -- are paying the price, says climate justice leader Angela...
Instructional Video4:03
SciShow

Moon dust tricky squid and the worlds biggest telescope

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains the enormity of the Giant Magellan Telescope, possibly the biggest telescope ever built, as well as updates about NASA's new mission to the moon, and an unusual discovery about the habits of deep-sea squid.
Instructional Video2:39
SciShow

How Do Laxatives Work?

12th - Higher Ed
Even though we're all probably very experienced poopers, sometimes we need a little help.
Instructional Video4:52
SciShow

Lemurs Are Into Networking Too

12th - Higher Ed
New research says that even lemurs benefit from networking skills and some frogs are finally bouncing back from the Chytrid epidemic.
Instructional Video8:45
PBS

Can You Solve the Poison Wine Challenge?

12th - Higher Ed
You're about to throw a party with a thousand bottles of wine, but you just discovered that one bottle is poisoned! Can you determine exactly which one it is?
Instructional Video3:55
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Can you solve the control room riddle? - Dennis Shasha

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As your country's top spy, you must infiltrate the headquarters of the evil syndicate, find the secret control panel, and deactivate their death ray. But your reconnaissance team is spotty, and you have only limited information about the...
Instructional Video13:40
3Blue1Brown

Binary, Hanoi, and Sierpinski, part 2

12th - Higher Ed
How counting in Ternary can solve a variant of the Tower's of Hanoi puzzle, and how this gives rise to a beautiful connection to Sierpinski's triangle.
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

The Key to an Artificial Heart ... and Open-Heart Surgery

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have been trying to pull blood out of the body and put it back in again since the early 1800s, but bypass machines haven't been easy to get right.
Instructional Video4:16
SciShow

Goodbye Glaciers, and Britain Doesn't Forget To Be Awesome

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow gives you latest in science news, including what "unstoppable" melting in Antarctica really means, and how you can help scientists increase the awesome through the 2014 Longitude Prize.
Instructional Video4:54
SciShow

Why Do We Have Bright Ideas in the Shower?

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever had a great idea or a burst of insight while taking a shower? Well, it turns out that shower thoughts are more than just an internet phenomenon, and understanding them better can help us harness their power for good!
Instructional Video4:43
TED Talks

TED: The sore problem of prosthetic limbs | David Sengeh

12th - Higher Ed
What drove David Sengeh to create a more comfortable prosthetic limb? He grew up in Sierra Leone, and too many of the people he loves are missing limbs after the brutal civil war there. When he noticed that people who had prosthetics...