Instructional Video5:38
SciShow

How Space Tech Is Changing Life on Earth: 2020 Edition

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve developed thousands of technologies for space exploration, but luckily for us, sometimes those solutions apply to problems here on the ground, too.
Instructional Video4:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The forgotten queen of Egypt | Abdallah Ewis

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The year is 1249 CE. King Louis IX is sailing the Nile, threatening to overthrow the sultan and capture Egypt. Egypt's commanders ask the sultan's wife, Shajar Al-Durr, to report this news to the injured sultan. But they don't know the...
Instructional Video7:14
SciShow

Space Exploration Isn’t Great for the Earth (But It Could Be)

12th - Higher Ed
Building and launching rockets to learn about other worlds hasn't been great for Earth, but environmental engineers are working on changing that legacy.
Instructional Video5:12
SciShow

Slug Sex and Bubble Rafts: Nature's Most Unusual Slime

12th - Higher Ed
Slime videos have been a popular trend on YouTube recently, but there are a few animals with their own versions of slime, which they use for some very cool things!
Instructional Video4:18
Bozeman Science

Ionic Bonding

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how ionic solids form when cations and anions are attracted. When atoms lose or gain electrons they form ions. The strength of the attraction between ions is based on the amount of charge and the...
Instructional Video4:29
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why is ketchup so hard to pour? - George Zaidan

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Ever go to pour ketchup on your fries-and nothing comes out? Or the opposite happens, and your plate is suddenly swimming in a sea of red? George Zaidan describes the physics behind this frustrating phenomenon, explaining how ketchup and...
Instructional Video10:33
Crash Course

Precipitation Reactions: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
A lot of ionic compounds dissolve in water, dissociating into individual ions. But when two ions find each other that form an insoluble compound, they suddenly fall out of solution in what's called a precipitation reaction. In this...
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow

Some Elements can be Liquid and Solid at the Same Time | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Some elements can basically be liquids and solids at the same time, which is a whole new state of matter, and scientists have discovered a new species of human in the Republic of the Philippines!
Instructional Video3:33
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What causes constipation? - Heba Shaheed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Visiting the bathroom is part of the daily human experience. But occasionally, constipation, a condition that causes a backup in your digestive system, strikes. In some especially uncomfortable cases, the food you eat can take several...
Instructional Video11:50
Bozeman Science

PS1A - Structure and Properties of Matter

12th - Higher Ed
In the first physical science video for the Next Generation Science Standards Paul Andersen explains the structure and properties of matter. He starts by explaining how all matter is made of about 100 smaller particles called matter. He...
Instructional Video2:28
SciShow Kids

Let’s Make Butter!

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks are having pancakes, but first they have to make a key ingredient: butter!
Instructional Video11:29
SciShow

7 Ways We Know What's Inside the Earth

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to some amazing scientific insights, we know a lot about the interior of our planet - even though we’ve never even made it through the crust.
Instructional Video7:04
PBS

Absolute Cold

12th - Higher Ed
Can we ever achieve absolute cold?
Instructional Video23:18
Crash Course Kids

Matter Compilation

3rd - 8th
Maybe you'd like to just hear about one topic for a while. We understand. So today, let's just watch some videos about Matter. What is matter? What are particles? And why is this important to know? Did you know that coal can turn into...
Instructional Video6:25
MinutePhysics

MAGNETS: How Do They Work?

12th - Higher Ed
ow do magnets work? Why do they attract and repel at long distances? Is it magic? No... it's quantum mechanics, and a bit more, as we explain in this, the longest MinutePhysics video ever.
Instructional Video4:08
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why is glass transparent? - Mark Miodownik

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you look through your glasses, binoculars or a window, you see the world on the other side. How is it that something so solid can be so invisible? Mark Miodownik melts the scientific secret behind amorphous solids.
Instructional Video4:01
SciShow Kids

Fizzy Soda Experiment!

K - 5th
You're just in time to help Jessi and Squeaks with their baking soda and vinegar experiment! Then, stick around to learn all about chemists, special scientists who study chemicals!
Instructional Video3:52
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Solid, liquid, gas and plasma? - Michael Murillo

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Have you ever seen static electricity cause a spark of light? What is that spark? What about lightning, the Northern Lights, or the tail of a comet? All of those things and many others _ in fact, 99.9% of the universe -- are made of...
Instructional Video16:47
TED Talks

Alwar Balasubramaniam: Art of substance and absence

12th - Higher Ed
Alwar Balasubramaniam's sculpture plays with time, shape, shadow, perspective: four tricky sensations that can reveal -- or conceal -- what's really out there. At TEDIndia, the artist shows slides of his extraordinary installations.
Instructional Video3:52
Crash Course Kids

(LEGO) Block Party

3rd - 8th
Playing with LEGOS is fun. But, they can also teach us something about matter. In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina chats about chemical reactions and the Conservation of Matter.
Instructional Video28:02
SciShow

5 Unusual Places to Look for Life | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
From "superhabitable planets" that can potentially sustain life longer than earth to rogue planets that don't even orbit a star, we’ve talked about some strange places that could host extraterrestrial life over the last few years. Here...
Instructional Video4:41
Be Smart

There's No Such Thing As Cold

12th - Higher Ed
You've felt cold before. Sometimes it's cold outside. But what if I told you that "cold" isn't real? There's no substance or quantity called "cold" in science. We can't measure the amount of "cold" in something. Instead it's about what's...
Instructional Video4:45
Crash Course Kids

Normal Stuff in Not-So-Normal Places

3rd - 8th
So, what happens to normal stuff (like water) when it goes to not so normal places? What happens if you take a glass of water to the top of Mt. Everest? Or Space? In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina shows us how matter is...
Instructional Video4:25
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Is fire a solid, a liquid, or a gas? - Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Sitting around a campfire, you can feel its heat, smell the woody smoke, and hear it crackle. If you get too close, it burns your eyes and stings your nostrils. You could stare at the bright flames forever as they twist and flicker in...