Instructional Video17:33
Debunked

What's The Most Indestructible Animal To Ever Live On Earth?

9th - 12th
Anti Nuke Cockroach, Space Water Bears, Bulletproof Dinos & Immortal Worms are just some of the incredible animals we look at as we determine the Toughest Most Indestructible Animal Ever!
Instructional Video2:30
Curated Video

Vice President

9th - Higher Ed
When you think of American tough guys, who springs to mind? Probably not the President. But two-term Commander-in-Chief Teddy Roosevelt was hard as nails.
Instructional Video15:30
Guinness World Records

Discovering the Titanosaur: The Largest 3D Printed Skeleton

K - 5th
After some bones of an unknown dinosaur were discovered, a 3D printed version of the skeleton was created at the American Museum of Natural History. Use this film to discuss fossils, paleontology and how 3D printing can bring the past...
Instructional Video6:40
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Barry Joseph - Informal Science Learning in a Digital Age

Higher Ed
Barry Joseph is known as a changemaker who is passionately devoted to envisioning new ways digital media can "address significant personal and social issues." Since 2012 Joseph has worked as the Associate Director For Digital Learning at...
Instructional Video8:12
The Art Assignment

Construct a landscape. | Paula McCartney | The Art Assignment

9th - 12th
This week’s assignment comes from artist Paula McCartney, whose work explores the boundaries between the natural and unnatural. Her assignment asks you to reexamine what those terms even mean by constructing an image of the so-called...
Instructional Video6:46
Science360

Marine biologist Eric Keen - ScienceLives

12th - Higher Ed
Marine biologist Eric Keen, who found time to produce an award-winning video while researching whales in the fjords of the Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia, is a graduate student at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC...
Instructional Video3:07
Science360

Engines of Curiosity: Award-Winning Museums Look to the Future

12th - Higher Ed
2015 Public Service Award winners extend their reach beyond those iconic buildings, into classrooms, curriculum and the lives of students. Winners of the Public Service Award, The Museum of Science in Boston and New York City’s American...
Podcast4:48
Tumble Science Podcast for Kids

Colorful Butterfly Wings

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The eye-popping colors and designs on butterfly wings are not just for show, but are an important adaptation that helps the insects fend off predators. Some butterflies have wings containing toxins, signaling danger to birds and other...
Instructional Video40:32
National Parks Service

Natural History is a Compass that Points to Love: Lessons Learned from a Falcon, a Warbler, and a Yosemite Ranger

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A talk by Richard Nevle, Deputy Director of the Earth Systems department at Stanford University. Richard’s teaching and work at Stanford has been wholly influenced by his connection to the Sierra Nevada mountains of California and...
Instructional Video10:14
Weird History

The Feud That Almost Destroyed Paleontology

12th - Higher Ed
Nothing better than an intense rivalry between scientists...right? Well, that's exactly what happened with paleontologists Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh -- two men who really take the cake for petty feuds.
Instructional Video10:33
Journey to the Microcosmos

The Microcosmos of the 1800s: The Story of Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg

9th - Higher Ed
The Microcosmos of the 1800s The Story of Christian Gottfried Ehrenberg
Instructional Video12:09
Professor Dave Explains

Theodore Roosevelt: The Rough Rider (1901-1909)

12th - Higher Ed
Teddy Roosevelt was such a dynamo of a man that he was put up on Mount Rushmore along with three other super-presidents. And the Teddy Bear is named after him! He was pretty fascinating, take a look.
Instructional Video10:18
AllTime 10s

10 Science Hoaxes That Fooled Everyone

12th - Higher Ed
Fake news is by no means a modern phenomenon. People have been spreading lies and tricking the world for centuries. Alltime 10s is here to bring you 10 of the weirdest, cleverest and downright impressive hoaxes that fooled everyone.
Instructional Video2:30
Curated Video

Teddy Roosevelt: One of the Toughest Presidents

9th - Higher Ed
When you think of American tough guys, who springs to mind? Probably not the President. But two-term Commander-in-Chief Teddy Roosevelt was hard as nails.
Stock Footage0:16
Bridgeman Arts

1970s: People look at exhibit devoted to elephants

Pre-K - Higher Ed
1970s: People look at exhibit devoted to elephants.
News Clip1:29
Curated Video

SYND 26-1-73 68.9 CARAT DIAMOND DISPLAYED AT MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY

Higher Ed
The uncut "Star Of Sierra Leone" on display at the Museum Of Natural History in New York. 1. ms and zoom out, front of Museum Of Natural History 2. cu Star Of Sierra Leone diamond rotating 3. Questions and answerws, Dr Vincent Manson...
Instructional Video33:43
Howard Hughes Medical Institute

The Day the Mesozoic Died

8th - Higher Ed Standards
A dynamic, three-part feature explores what caused mass extinction of the dinosaurs at the end of the Cretaceous period. Computer animations, interviews, and on-site footage from around the world divulge evidence that it was the K-T...
Instructional Video9:08
Curated OER

Charles Darwin, Part 1/3

9th - 12th
A wonderfully humorous and irreverent take on the early life of Charles Darwin tracing his struggles at school to his arrival at the Galapagos. Part one of the three-part Greatest Scientists series narrated by Dr. Allan Chapman.
Instructional Video
Crash Course

Crash Course History of Science #19: Biology Before Darwin

9th - 10th
You've probably heard of Charles Darwin, but how did scientists before him form their theories about life, evolution, and extinction? Learn how different people in the seventeenth and eighteenth century tried to answer the question -...