Instructional Video11:50
SciShow

Why It Actually Took 50 Years to Make COVID mRNA Vaccines

12th - Higher Ed
The FDA recently approved two mRNA vaccines for COVID-19, but it was a challenge to make this type of vaccine work. And it took decades of research to get us to the point where scientists could make those vaccines as quickly as they did.
Instructional Video5:27
SciShow

Why Can I Hear This .gif?

12th - Higher Ed
Certain people can hear particular animated gifs despite them containing no audio information, and scientists have some leads on what might cause this seemingly impossible phenomenon.
Instructional Video4:20
SciShow

The 2015 Nobel Prizes!

12th - Higher Ed
Over the past few weeks, the Nobel committees have been announcing the 2015 laureates. This year’s winners in the physics and chemistry categories made discoveries about the tiny neutrinos flying through all of us, and the ways our...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What are mini brains? - Madeline Lancaster

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Shielded by our thick skulls and swaddled in layers of protective tissue, the human brain is extremely difficult to observe in action. Luckily, scientists can use brain organoids - pencil-eraser-sized masses of cells that function like...
Instructional Video6:24
SciShow

Editing Genes Inside the Human Body

12th - Higher Ed
We talk a lot about CRISPR and "designer babies" but the science of editing genes is varied and complex. This month, an adult man received billions of gene-editing viruses via an IV in an effort to treat a rare disease.
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

How Bad Are Satellite Constellations for Astronomy? - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Imagine being excited to use one of the world's most advanced telescopes, only to see bright streaks of light on every picture! This is a problem facing some astronomers as satellites fill up the night sky.
Instructional Video16:22
TED Talks

Susan Lim: Transplant cells, not organs

12th - Higher Ed
Pioneering surgeon Susan Lim performed the first liver transplant in Asia. But a moral concern with transplants (where do donor livers come from ...) led her to look further, and to ask: Could we be transplanting cells, not whole organs?...
Instructional Video4:00
SciShow

Jimmy Carters Cancer Cure

12th - Higher Ed
In August 2015, Jimmy Carter announced that he had a form of cancer that spread to his liver and brain. A few months later he reported the cancer was gone. How?
Instructional Video3:08
SciShow Kids

Where Does Yogurt Come From?

K - 5th
When we think of Yogurt, we think of a tangy and sweet treat that's good at any time! But there's a tiny little ingredient in there that helps to make it what it is!
Instructional Video3:49
SciShow Kids

The Fastest Punch in the World

K - 5th
There is one ocean creature that is so strong, it could punch its way out of most aquariums, and it's only 30 centimeters long!
Instructional Video4:20
SciShow

Alien Hand Syndrome: When a Limb Goes Rogue

12th - Higher Ed
What would you do if your hand seemed to develop a mind of its own, beyond your control?
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

How Different Types of Alcohol Affect Your Emotions

12th - Higher Ed
Despite popular belief, different types of drinks shouldn’t make you feel any differently because they’re all ethanol. Our brains are complicated, though, and there’s more to the story than just the drink itself.
Instructional Video6:00
SciShow

A New Idea About Tabby's Star!

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers might have finally discovered part of why Tabby's Star acts so strangely and we have some new ideas about what triggers a type Ia supernova.
Instructional Video21:09
TED Talks

Nick Bostrom: How civilization could destroy itself -- and 4 ways we could prevent it

12th - Higher Ed
Humanity is on its way to creating a "black ball": a technological breakthrough that could destroy us all, says philosopher Nick Bostrom. In this incisive, surprisingly light-hearted conversation with Head of TED Chris Anderson, Bostrom...
Instructional Video9:53
TED Talks

TED: What you need to know about CRISPR | Ellen Jorgensen

12th - Higher Ed
Should we bring back the wooly mammoth? Or edit a human embryo? Or wipe out an entire species that we consider harmful? The genome-editing technology CRISPR has made extraordinary questions like these legitimate -- but how does it work?...
Instructional Video2:17
MinuteEarth

When Trees Go Nuts

12th - Higher Ed
Every once in a while, all the oaks or spruces or other plants in a region suddenly produce a tremendous bounty of seeds – up to 100 times more than usual. But why do they do it, and how do they all manage to sync up?...
Instructional Video8:33
SciShow

7 Kinds of Makeup Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
You look really pretty, but what are you actually putting all over your face?
Instructional Video13:45
TED Talks

Colin Camerer: When you're making a deal, what's going on in your brain?

12th - Higher Ed
When two people are trying to make a deal -- whether they’re competing or cooperating -- what’s really going on inside their brains? Behavioral economist Colin Camerer shows research that reveals how badly we predict what others are...
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

How Would We Stop a Nuclear Missile?

12th - Higher Ed
Most of us are hoping that any nuclear threats are just empty threats, and getting at the facts about ICBMs can be difficult. But what would actually happen if someone launched a nuclear weapon?
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

Space Particles Are Flying Through You Right Now!

12th - Higher Ed
Tiny remnants of extreme nuclear reactions in space are flying through your body right now. And astronomers are hunting them to learn more about some of the most energetic and violent objects in the universe.
Instructional Video13:06
TED Talks

Ryan Martin: Why we get mad -- and why it's healthy

12th - Higher Ed
Anger researcher Ryan Martin draws from a career studying what makes people mad to explain some of the cognitive processes behind anger -- and why a healthy dose of it can actually be useful. "Your anger exists in you ... because it...
Instructional Video9:23
TED Talks

TED: How this FBI strategy is actually creating US-based terrorists | Trevor Aaronson

12th - Higher Ed
There's an organization responsible for more terrorism plots in the United States than al-Qaeda, al-Shabaab and ISIS combined: The FBI. How? Why? In an eye-opening talk, investigative journalist Trevor Aaronson reveals a disturbing FBI...
Instructional Video4:45
SciShow

3 Extreme New Mission Concepts

12th - Higher Ed
From asteroid spaceships, to exploring ice volcanoes, let's look at a few of the NIAC's recently approved Phase I projects!
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The ferocious predatory dinosaurs of Cretaceous Sahara - Nizar Ibrahim

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In Cretaceous times (around 100 million years ago), North Africa was home to a huge river system and a bizarre menagerie of giant prehistoric predators -- including the Spinosaurus, a dinosaur even more fearsome than the Tyrannosaurus...