Instructional Video4:54
SciShow

If Tomatoes Could Talk, Here’s What They’d Say | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
We’d pictured the plant-fruit relationship as one-way, but new research reports that sometimes the fruit can talk back! And while cow burps are a widely cited contributor to climate change, it turns out that wild pigs might also be...
Instructional Video4:42
Bozeman Science

Biological and Polymer Systems

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the structure of a biomolecule fits the function of the biomolecule. For example and enzyme must interact correctly with a substrate to lower the activation energy, The covalent and non-covalent...
Instructional Video3:06
SciShow

Antlers: The Secret to Deer's Cancer-Fighting Superpowers

12th - Higher Ed
Antler cells divide really fast, and with their super-fast growth, antlers resemble tumors in some ways. But animals in the deer family are less likely to get cancer than many other organisms, and a recent genetics study may have...
Instructional Video9:21
TED Talks

Manu Prakash: A 50-cent microscope that folds like origami

12th - Higher Ed
Perhaps you’ve punched out a paper doll or folded an origami swan? TED Fellow Manu Prakash and his team have created a microscope made of paper that's just as easy to fold and use. A sparkling demo that shows how this invention could...
Instructional Video4:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do vitamins work? - Ginnie Trinh Nguyen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Vitamins are the building blocks that keep our bodies running; they help build muscle and bone, capture energy, heal wounds and more. But if our body doesn't create vitamins, how do they get into our system? Ginnie Trinh Nguyen describes...
Instructional Video2:19
SciShow

Why Can't You Remember Being a Baby?

12th - Higher Ed
You're pretty sure being a baby was awesome, but why can't you actually remember any of it?
Instructional Video6:05
Be Smart

Are We All Related?

12th - Higher Ed
In part 3 of our special series on human ancestry, we investigate how closely related we all really are. Basic math tells us that all humans share ancestors. But you'll be amazed at how recently those shared ancestors lived. Thanks to...
Instructional Video3:16
SciShow Kids

Why Does My Ear Hurt?

K - 5th
Squeaks is feeling a little under the weather! As if a sore throat and a stuffy head weren't bad enough, he also has an earache. Join him to learn why we get earaches and what we can do to help our bodies get over them faster!
Instructional Video9:37
Crash Course

Vectors and 2D Motion: Crash Course Physics

12th - Higher Ed
Continuing in our journey of understanding motion, direction, and velocity... today, Shini introduces the ideas of Vectors and Scalars so we can better understand how to figure out motion in 2 Dimensions. But what does that have to do...
Instructional Video11:54
Crash Course

Tragedy Lessons from Aristotle: Crash Course Theater #3

12th - Higher Ed
Aristotle. He knows a lot, right? And if you choose to believe Aristotle, then you must believe all the mechanics of tragedy that Mike is about to lay on you. This week, we're looking at Aristotle's rules for the basic elements of...
Instructional Video5:05
Curated Video

%$?# Allergies!

12th - Higher Ed
Springtime means the arrival of green grass, bright flowers, and buzzing bees. But for many of us, it's also about sneezing, watery red eyes, and a runny nose, thanks to allergies. In this week's video, you'll learn why we get allergies,...
Instructional Video9:59
SciShow

6 of the Biggest Single-Celled Organisms

12th - Higher Ed
When you picture a single cell, you probably imagine something super tiny that you had to look at through a microscope. But, there are some huge exceptions to this rule. And we really do mean huge.

Cha
pters
...
Instructional Video17:20
SciShow Kids

Happy Earth Day!

K - 5th
Join Jessi and Squeaks as they talk about some things you can do to make the earth a better place!
Instructional Video12:48
SciShow

4 Creatures You Can See With Your Own Microscope!

12th - Higher Ed
You might have been one of those lucky people that had a microscope to tinker with as a kid. But if you missed out on that, it’s not too late! If you’re interested in making your very own foray into the world of microscopy, here are four...
Instructional Video17:08
TED Talks

Anupam Mishra: The ancient ingenuity of water harvesting

12th - Higher Ed
With wisdom and wit, Anupam Mishra talks about the amazing feats of engineering built centuries ago by the people of India's Golden Desert to harvest water. These ancient aqueducts and stepwells are still used today -- and are often...
Instructional Video10:20
Crash Course

How Rivers Shape the Landscape: Crash Course Geography

12th - Higher Ed
Today we're going to talk about rivers and how these dynamic, delicate, yet powerful systems are able to constantly change the landscape. We'll focus on the Zambezi River in Southeast Africa following its main features from the...
Instructional Video11:47
TED Talks

Jennifer Vail: The science of friction -- and its surprising impact on our lives

12th - Higher Ed
Tribology: it's a funny-sounding word you might not have heard before, but it could change how you see and interact with the physical world, says mechanical engineer Jennifer Vail. Offering lessons from tribology -- the study of friction...
Instructional Video11:15
Crash Course

Race, Ethnicity, and the Cultural Landscape: Crash Course Geography

12th - Higher Ed
Sometimes culture can seem invisible like when we're surrounded by signals that tell us we're with others who are like us, but if we live or travel somewhere where the traits that define social norms are not our traits, culture can...
Instructional Video2:39
SciShow

These Frogs Hide Thanks to Transparent Skin

12th - Higher Ed
Hanging out in the trees of Central and South America are some frogs with pretty unusual coloration. Which is to say, parts of them have no color at all. Their bellies are completely see-through!
Instructional Video9:01
TED Talks

TED: Education is a fundamental right for every child | Makhtoum Abdalla

12th - Higher Ed
For children growing up in refugee camps, education is a powerful tool of liberation. In this inspiring talk, Makhtoum Abdalla, displaced as a child in Sudan and now living with his family in the Otash camp in Darfur, shares his biggest...
Instructional Video3:12
SciShow

How Some People Echolocate Like Bats

12th - Higher Ed
Animals like bats and dolphins navigate the world using echolocation, but there’s also another animal capable of such a feat: humans.
Instructional Video4:24
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How do we separate the seemingly inseparable? - Iddo Magen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Your cell phone is mainly made of plastics and metals. It's easy to appreciate the process by which those elements add up to something so useful. But there's another story we don't hear about -- how did we get our raw ingredients in the...
Instructional Video4:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How does cancer spread through the body? - Ivan Seah Yu Jun

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Cancer usually begins with one tumor in a specific area of the body. But if the tumor is not removed, cancer has the ability to spread to nearby organs as well as places far away from the origin, like the brain. How does cancer move to...
Instructional Video4:56
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What is chirality and how did it get in my molecules? - Michael Evans

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Improve your understanding of molecular properties with this lesson on the fascinating property of chirality. Your hands are the secret to understanding the strange similarity between two molecules that look almost exactly alike, but are...