Instructional Video4:46
Be Smart

Your #ScienceWoman Heroes

12th - Higher Ed
We teamed up with Amy Poehler's Smart Girls to ask you who your #sciencewoman heroes are. Here's what you told us!
Instructional Video19:55
TED Talks

TED: A seat at the table isn't the solution for gender equity | Lilly Singh

12th - Higher Ed
Women and girls are conditioned to believe success is "a seat at the table." Creator, actress and author Lilly Singh thinks we need to build a better table. In this hilarious, incisive talk, Singh traces the arc of her career from...
Instructional Video4:28
SciShow

What Makes Something Funny?

12th - Higher Ed
It's said that the quickest way to kill a joke is to explain it, but scientists are still interested in finding out just what tickles our brains and makes us find something funny.
Instructional Video4:22
TED-Ed

TED-ED: History vs. Cleopatra - Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
She was the most notorious woman in ancient history, a queen who enraptured not one but two of Rome's greatest generals. But was she just a skilled seductress or a great ruler in her own right? Alex Gendler puts this controversial figure...
Instructional Video10:51
TED Talks

France Villarta: The gender-fluid history of the Philippines

12th - Higher Ed
In much of the world, gender is viewed as binary: man or woman, each assigned characteristics and traits designated by biological sex. But that's not the case everywhere, says France Villarta. In a talk that's part cultural love letter,...
Instructional Video9:59
TED Talks

Geena Rocero: Why I must come out

12th - Higher Ed
When fashion model Geena Rocero first saw a photo of herself in a bikini, "I thought ... you have arrived!" As she reveals, that's because she was born with the gender assignment "boy." In this moving talk, Rocero tells the story of...
Instructional Video4:48
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is "normal" and what is "different"? | Yana Buhrer Tavanier

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The word "normal" is often used as a synonym for "typical," "expected," or even "correct." By that logic, most people should fit the description of normal. But time and time again, so-called normal descriptions of our bodies, minds, and...
Instructional Video4:40
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Japanese folktale of the selfish scholar | Iseult Gillespie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In ancient Kyoto, a Shinto scholar found himself distracted from his prayers and sought to perform a purification ritual that would cleanse him. He decided to travel to the revered Hie Shrine; walking the path alone, ignoring any...
Instructional Video3:40
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The true story of Sacajawea - Karen Mensing

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the early 19th century, a young Agaidika teenager named Sacajawea was enlisted by explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to aid her husband Toussaint Charbonneau as a guide to the Western United States. Karen Mensing debunks...
Instructional Video4:34
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The science of attraction - Dawn Maslar

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Romantic chemistry is all about warm, gooey feelings that gush from the deepest depths of the heart-right? Not quite. Actually, the real boss behind attraction is your brain, which runs through a very quick, very complex series of...
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

Are Power Poses Super Life Hacks or Super Junk?

12th - Higher Ed
Your body language can communicate a lot of information to other people, but can striking a power pose revolutionize your life?
Instructional Video5:54
Amoeba Sisters

Punnett Squares and Sex-Linked Traits

12th - Higher Ed
Explore inheritance when carried on the X chromosome with the Amoeba Sisters! This video focuses on how to do general Punnett square problems that involve traits on the sex chromosomes (X and Y chromosomes). We do want to point out...
Instructional Video10:48
Crash Course

Marie Curie and Spooky Rays: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
It's time to talk about one of the most awesome scientists that has ever been awesome: Marie Curie. She figured out ways to get an amazing education despite the limitations of her homeland, discovered some really important answers to the...
Instructional Video10:17
TED Talks

John Lloyd: An inventory of the invisible

12th - Higher Ed
Nature's mysteries meet tack-sharp wit in this hilarious, 10-minute mix of quips and fun lessons, as comedian, writer and TV man John Lloyd plucks at the substance of several things not seen.
Instructional Video4:58
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The genius of Marie Curie - Shohini Ghose

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Marie Sk_odowska Curie's revolutionary research laid the groundwork for our understanding of physics and chemistry, blazing trails in oncology, technology, medicine, and nuclear physics, to name a few. But what did she actually do?...
Instructional Video14:31
TED Talks

TED: What it takes to make change | Jacqueline Novogratz

12th - Higher Ed
What can you do to build a better world? Sharing stories from her pioneering career dedicated to tackling poverty, Jacqueline Novogratz offers three principles to spark and sustain a moral revolution. Learn how you can commit (or...
Instructional Video9:15
TED Talks

TED: 3 things men can do to promote gender equity | Jimmie Briggs

12th - Higher Ed
It is time for a gender reckoning, beginning with men authentically confronting our internal selves and each other, says essayist and intersectional justice advocate Jimmie Briggs. In this call to action for gender equity, he unpacks how...
Instructional Video12:30
TED Talks

TED: The power of citizen video to create undeniable truths | Yvette Alberdingk Thijm

12th - Higher Ed
Could smartphones and cameras be our most powerful weapons for social justice? Through her organization Witness, Yvette Alberdingk Thijm is developing strategies and technologies to help activists use video to protect and defend human...
Instructional Video9:45
TED Talks

TED: The likability dilemma for women leaders | Robin Hauser

12th - Higher Ed
When women lead, bias often follows. Documentarian Robin Hauser dives into the dilemma between competence and likeability faced by women in leadership roles, detangling the unconscious beliefs and gendered thinking that distort what it...
Instructional Video4:34
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The pharaoh that wouldn't be forgotten - Kate Narev

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Hatshepsut was a female pharaoh during the New Kingdom in Egypt. Twenty years after her death, somebody smashed her statues, took a chisel and attempted to erase the pharaoh's name and image from history. But who did it? And why? Kate...
Instructional Video5:50
TED Talks

TED: Poems of war, peace, women, power | Suheir Hammad

12th - Higher Ed
Poet Suheir Hammad performs two spine-tingling spoken-word pieces: "What I Will" and "break (clustered)" -- meditations on war and peace, on women and power. Wait for the astonishing line: "Do not fear what has blown up. If you must,...
Instructional Video9:37
TED Talks

TED: 3 ways to be a better ally in the workplace | Melinda Epler

12th - Higher Ed
We're taught to believe that hard work and dedication will lead to success, but that's not always the case. Gender, race, ethnicity, religion, disability, sexual orientation are among the many factors that affect our chances, says writer...
Instructional Video10:40
TED Talks

Shirin Neshat: Art in exile

12th - Higher Ed
Iranian-born artist Shirin Neshat explores the paradox of being an artist in exile: a voice for her people, but unable to go home. In her work, she explores Iran pre- and post-Islamic Revolution, tracing political and societal change...
Instructional Video9:57
TED Talks

TED: A sci-fi story of climate optimism | Vandana Singh

12th - Higher Ed
The world is a living tapestry ... As the weave of life is torn apart in one place, the threads unravel in another, says author and physics professor Vandana Singh, acknowledging humanity's interconnectedness with the planet -- and the...