Instructional Video2:51
MinuteEarth

Why Does This Shrimp Cost More Than A Car?

12th - Higher Ed
Some aquarium hobbyists will pay $10,000 or more for a single shrimp because of the rarity of their colors or patterns.
Instructional Video8:59
Bozeman Science

LS3A Inheritance of Traits

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the importance of DNA is organisms. DNA contains the blueprint for each organisms. The DNA codes for the mRNA which creates proteins. The DNA also is the unit of inheritance which is passed from...
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

What to Know About the New COVID Variants | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Two new versions of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, the UK and South African variants, were announced in December. They've spread quickly in their countries of origin, and have begun popping up around the world. Join us to find out...
Instructional Video10:42
TED Talks

TED: A new superweapon in the fight against cancer | Paula Hammond

12th - Higher Ed
Cancer is a very clever, adaptable disease. To defeat it, says medical researcher and educator Paula Hammond, we need a new and powerful mode of attack. With her colleagues at MIT, Hammond engineered a nanoparticle one-hundredth the size...
Instructional Video10:50
Crash Course

Changing the Blueprints of Life - Genetic Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #38

12th - Higher Ed
Can we change the blueprints of life? This week we are exploring that question with genetic engineering. We’ll discuss how selective breeding can improve agricultural practices, and the potential DNA-level engineering could have on other...
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

New 8Letter DNA Rewrites the Genetic Code SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have successfully created synthetic DNA with twice as many base pairs as normal, with potential implications in medicine, data storage, and even understanding how life could evolve elsewhere in the universe.
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

The Girl Who Never Grew Up

12th - Higher Ed
The human body generally grows in a predictable pattern, but in one rare case, one American girl essentially remained a toddler her entire life.
Instructional Video16:12
TED Talks

David R. Liu: Can we cure genetic diseases by rewriting DNA?

12th - Higher Ed
In a story of scientific discovery, chemical biologist David R. Liu shares a breakthrough: his lab's development of base editors that can rewrite DNA. This crucial step in genome editing takes the promise of CRISPR to the next level: if...
Instructional Video5:58
Be Smart

CRISPR and the Future of Human Evolution

12th - Higher Ed
In part 4 of our special series on human ancestry and evolution, we look into the future. Now that genetic engineering tools like CRISPR allow us to edit our genes, how will that impact human evolution going forward? Are designer babies...
Instructional Video3:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The cancer gene we all have - Michael Windelspecht

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Within every cell in our body, two copies of a tumor suppressor gene called BRCA1 are tasked with regulating the speed at which cells divide. Michael Windelspecht explains how these genes can sometimes mutate, making those cells less...
Instructional Video3:09
SciShow

Patenting Person Parts

12th - Higher Ed
Since the advent of genetic engineering, a lot of weird questions have cropped up, particularly with regard to what information a company can patent. Individual genes, as they are discovered, are now immediately patented and can be...
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

Babies With Three Parents

12th - Higher Ed
You thought you knew all the ways to make a baby.
Instructional Video24:12
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: Carl Zimmer & Genetics

12th - Higher Ed
Curious about genetics? Dig in a little deeper with this special SciShow Talk Show featuring science writer and 2016 Stephen Jay Gould prize winner Carl Zimmer talking about what he did after receiving himself on a hard drive.
Instructional Video3:35
SciShow

We Skipped Flu Season. That's Bad

12th - Higher Ed
Some experts feared we were in for a "twindemic" during the 2020-2021 flu season. That didn't happen, which might mean that there will be more people susceptible to getting sick this year.
Instructional Video6:03
Be Smart

Your Salad Is Trying To Kill You

12th - Higher Ed
Plants are the most important source of nutrients for pretty much all of Earth's animals, and many of the planet's bacteria and fungi too. Humans like them so much that we line them up in salad bars so we can feast upon their crunchy...
Instructional Video6:57
Amoeba Sisters

Mutations (Updated)

12th - Higher Ed
Join the Amoeba Sisters as they explain gene and chromosome mutations, and explore the significance of these changes. This updated video has improved audio and images! Codons and the amino acids they code for is represented by standard...
Instructional Video4:55
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do viruses jump from animals to humans? - Ben Longdon

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Discover the science of how viruses can jump from one species to another and the deadly epidemics that can result from these pathogens. -- At a Maryland country fair in 2017, farmers reported feverish hogs with inflamed eyes and running...
Instructional Video12:57
Bozeman Science

Genotypes and Phenotypes

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how changes in the genotype of an individual can affect the phenotype. He begins with genotype:phenotype::letters:story analogy. He explains how mutations can be neutral, beneficial or harmful. He also explains how...
Instructional Video7:40
Bozeman Science

Microevolution

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen defines microevolution as any change in the frequency of the allele pool. He then explains the five mechanisms of evolution; small sample size, non-random mating, mutations, gene flow and natural selection.
Instructional Video10:32
SciShow

How Much Junk Is in Your DNA Trunk?

12th - Higher Ed
The human genome is 3.2 billion base pairs long and contains around 20,000 genes, but how much of that is garbage?
Instructional Video3:21
SciShow

Why Do Our Bones Make Our Blood?

12th - Higher Ed
Our bones are multi-functional body builders, but perhaps their most mysterious function is the production of blood. Scientists now think they have a pretty good idea why this is where our blood gets made.
Instructional Video3:17
MinuteEarth

Are We Really 99% Chimp?

12th - Higher Ed
Are We Really 99% Chimp?
Instructional Video7:41
Be Smart

The Deadliest Flu Season in History?

12th - Higher Ed
The flu might feel like some minor illness that you don't need to worry about much, but tens of thousands of people still die from it every year. And back in 1918, Flu killed up to 5% of the world's population. Could a flu that bad...
Instructional Video10:38
Crash Course

Population Genetics: When Darwin Met Mendel - Crash Course Biology

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks about population genetics, which helps to explain the evolution of populations over time by combing the principles of Mendel and Darwin, and by means of the Hardy-Weinberg equation.