Instructional Video4:13
SciShow

How Self Care Can Save the Environment

12th - Higher Ed
If you're feeling anxious about climate change, you're not alone, but taking steps to help the world might also help you.
Instructional Video4:48
SciShow

Meet CERNs New Particle A DoubleCharm Baryon

12th - Higher Ed
This week, CERN announced a new particle that will help further understanding of the fundamental forces, and a simulation of ancient creatures may give us a clue as to how life grew beyond the microscopic.
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow

The Very Real Consequences of Weight Discrimination

12th - Higher Ed
Weight discrimination has very real health consequences, especially when some of the most common perpetrators are medical professionals.
Instructional Video5:23
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What if there were 1 trillion more trees? | Jean-François Bastin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Today humanity produces more than 1,400 tons of carbon every minute. To combat climate change, we need to reduce fossil fuel emissions, and draw down excess CO2 to restore the balance of greenhouse gases. Like all plants, trees consume...
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow

Dark Matter is Slowing Down the Milky Way

12th - Higher Ed
The effects of dark matter on galaxies is a mystifying and difficult thing to study, but the Milky Way's galactic bar might present an exciting way to quantify how much of it exists!
Instructional Video3:53
SciShow

Where Did Humans Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us about new and confusing discoveries in the field of Human Evolution.
Instructional Video3:25
SciShow

We Had Catnip All Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
Why do cats love catnip so much? Researchers have found a possible evolutionary answer to this adorable feline phenomenon!
Instructional Video2:48
SciShow

How Do Ducks Stay Dry?

12th - Higher Ed
You might be familiar with the phrase "like water off a ducks back". But it's not that ducks don't get wet, it's that they get wet, with style.
Instructional Video3:39
SciShow

Synthetic Life & The Science of E-Cigs

12th - Higher Ed
Welcome back to SciShow News. We are working on creating organisms with a minimal genome to sustain life as well as researching what and how much we inhale with e-cigs.
Instructional Video5:35
SciShow

Why We Like Bad News

12th - Higher Ed
Even if we say we prefer good news, we're wired to pay more attention to bad news. And while it might feel like the world is becoming a more scary, dangerous place, many things are actually better now than ever, and social media might be...
Instructional Video5:36
SciShow

New Evidence for Planet 9! SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have found more evidence for Planet 9, but another study has added another problem to our list of space travel problems.
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

How Do Brine Shrimp Survive In Packaging For Years?

12th - Higher Ed
Nearly everyone has some experience with the illustriously branded brine shrimp, but there’s a whole lot more to the creatures’ resilience than what it says on the box.
Instructional Video11:33
TED Talks

TED: The coolest animal you know nothing about ... and how we can save it | Patrícia Medici

12th - Higher Ed
Although the tapir is one of the world's largest land mammals, the lives of these solitary, nocturnal creatures have remained a mystery. Known as "the living fossil," the very same tapir that roams the forests and grasslands of South...
Instructional Video9:20
SciShow

Taboos of Science

12th - Higher Ed
Hank discusses some of the taboos which have plagued scientific inquiry in the past and a few that still exist today.
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

The Tiny Planet Revealing Gravity’s Big Secrets

12th - Higher Ed
Mercury’s path through our solar system is, well, a little eccentric, and some of its movements were a mystery astronomers couldn’t explain for a long time. Then, in the early 20th century, Einstein reran the numbers and proved a whole...
Instructional Video5:00
SciShow

3 Epic Space Mission Fails

12th - Higher Ed
Space missions are difficult. Reid describes three epic space mission fails!
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

Does Ripping Off a Bandage Hurt Less?

12th - Higher Ed
To peel slowly or just rip it off, what is the best way to take off an adhesive bandage? One study found some interesting results.
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How statistics can be misleading - Mark Liddell

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Statistics are persuasive. So much so that people, organizations, and whole countries base some of their most important decisions on organized data. But any set of statistics might have something lurking inside it that can turn the...
Instructional Video7:57
SciShow

Why Are Some U.S. Cities Declaring Racism a Public Health Crisis?

12th - Higher Ed
In addition to being a serious social issue, racism is also a serious challenge to public health. In fact, over the last year and a half, dozens of cities have declared racism a public health crisis - and today, we here at SciShow will...
Instructional Video6:27
SciShow

Ketamine Gets Controversial FDA Approval for Depression Treatment SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
The FDA has approved a whole new class of antidepressant, and ultrasounds might be far more useful than we thought.
Instructional Video4:43
SciShow

Why Inducing Hallucinations Might Be a Good Idea

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers have developed ways to induce hallucinations, and though it sounds weird, it could also tell us a lot about mental health.
Instructional Video9:34
SciShow

4 Body Parts Discovered in the Last 10 Years

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know we are still discovering completely new pieces of our anatomies? Even in the last decade, we've found multiple new body parts, including some you can see with the naked eye!
Instructional Video2:38
SciShow

NASA's Ambitious Asteroid Mission

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space is one year old! And we’re celebrating by talking about new plans for a mission we told you about in our very first episode of SciShow News!
Instructional Video3:33
SciShow

This Animal Has a Retractable Anus

12th - Higher Ed
Most animals keep their poop chutes on the opposite side of their body from where they eat. But that doesn’t mean it’s always the case, and bryozoans are great examples of how creative you can get with where you put your anus.