Instructional Video11:44
Crash Course

In Da Club - Membranes & Transport: Crash Course Biology

12th - Higher Ed
Hank describes how cells regulate their contents and communicate with one another via mechanisms within the cell membrane.
Instructional Video7:33
Crash Course

Hydrocarbon Derivatives - Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Functional groups? Functional groups within functional groups? Hank takes today's Crash Course video to discuss some confusing ideas about Hydrocarbon Derivatives, but then makes it all make more sense. -- Table of Contents Alcohols...
Instructional Video4:27
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why is it so hard to escape poverty? | Ann-Helén Bay

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Imagine that you've been unemployed for months. Government benefit programs have helped you cover your expenses, but you're barely getting by. Finally, you receive a paycheck— but there's a catch. Your new job pays enough to disqualify...
Instructional Video3:45
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Biofuels and bioprospecting for beginners - Craig A. Kohn

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Biofuels can provide energy without the reliance on environmentally harmful fossils fuels -- but scientists are still searching for a plentiful source. Craig A. Kohn demonstrates how cellulose, the naturally abundant tough walls of plant...
Instructional Video9:15
Crash Course

How to Engineer Health - Drug Discovery & Delivery: Crash Course Engineering #36

12th - Higher Ed
Engineers are problem solvers, and our own health is full of problems to be engineered. In this episode we discuss drug discovery and drug delivery. We’ll explore everything from classical and reverse pharmacology to the new field of...
Instructional Video8:37
Bozeman Science

Water: A Polar Molecule

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the polarity of water makes life on the planet possible. Oxygen is highly electronegative and pulls the electrons closely creating a partial negative charge. The polarity of water (and the...
Instructional Video4:00
Crash Course Kids

Got Some Solutions?

3rd - 8th
So, there might not be just one solution to a problem. I know that may sound weird, but it's true. So, how do you come up with multiple solutions? In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Engineer Sabrina shows us how to do that.
Instructional Video4:27
Crash Course Kids

Architecture Adventure

3rd - 8th
If we want to build a place for us to live, or to hang out, or do eat dinner with our friends, we're going to need a special kind of engineering called architecture. In this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina gets us to help her build...
Instructional Video3:58
Crash Course Kids

Defining Success

3rd - 8th
In our last episode, Sabrina talked about how Engineers define the problems they need to solve. But how do you know when you've actually solved a problem? What do you expect to happen that would equal success? In this episode, Sabrina...
Instructional Video10:26
Crash Course

Acid-Base Reactions in Solution: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Last week, Hank talked about how stuff mixes together in solutions. Today, and for the next few weeks, he will talk about the actual reactions happening in those solutions - atoms reorganizing themselves to create whole new substances in...
Instructional Video4:07
SciShow

The Strongest Bases in the World

12th - Higher Ed
Acids are widely considered to be the scariest chemical compounds of all, but bases can be just as powerful. Most powerful of all are a special class of pH scale-defying bases called superbases!
Instructional Video9:46
Bozeman Science

Solutions

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the important properties of solutions. A solution can be either a solid, liquid or gas but it must be homogeneous in nature. The solutes can not be separated with a filter and so either chromatography...
Instructional Video2:45
MinuteEarth

Why Water Dissolves (Almost) Everything

12th - Higher Ed
Water can dissolve more substances than anything else on earth...so why doesn't it dissolve everything away?
Instructional Video2:56
SciShow

How to Make a Lemon Battery

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shows us another SciShow: Experiment! This time he's tackling what may be the most cliche, well-known and misunderstood experiment of all time: the lemon battery. The take home message in this one is: the electricity is NOT in the...
Instructional Video7:05
Bozeman Science

Solubility

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the dissolution of a solute in a solution can be explained as a reversible reaction. Bonds in the solid solute are broken and the ions are dissolved in a solution. The Ksp (or solubility product...
Instructional Video5:28
Crash Course Kids

Water Fix!

3rd - 8th
How can we fix water shortages? Well, we know that shortages are a problem and can cause fighting because water is a resource. When you limit a resource, things get scary. But, in this episode of Crash Course Kids, Sabrina talks about...
Instructional Video8:43
Bozeman Science

Electrochemistry

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how electrochemical reactions can separate the reduction and oxidation portions of a redox reactions to generate (or consume) electricity. The half reactions can be analyzed to determine the potential...
Instructional Video17:32
TED Talks

TED: The path to ending ethnic conflicts | Stefan Wolff

12th - Higher Ed
Civil wars and ethnic conflicts have brought the world incredible suffering, but Stefan Wolff's figures show that, in the last 20 years, their number has steadily decreased. He extracts critical lessons from Northern Ireland, Liberia,...
Instructional Video13:42
TED Talks

Asmeret Asefaw Berhe: A climate change solution that's right under our feet

12th - Higher Ed
There's two times more carbon in the earth's soil than in all of its vegetation and the atmosphere -- combined. Biogeochemist Asmeret Asefaw Berhe dives into the science of soil and shares how we could use its awesome carbon-trapping...
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow Kids

Jessi Has a Problem!

K - 5th
Do you like using your imagination to build things that solve problems? If you do, you're thinking like an engineer! Learn how engineers identify and solve problems, then help Jessi with a big problem of her own!
Instructional Video5:17
SciShow

Here's What Kevlar and Your Smartphone Have in Common

12th - Higher Ed
You might not believe it, but the same chemistry that brought us bulletproof vests and modern sailing sails also gave us the technology to build your smart phone. But that doesn’t mean these chemists were thinking about these...
Instructional Video7:28
Crash Course

Solutions: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
This week, Hank elaborates on why Fugu can kill you by illustrating the ideas of solutions and discussing molarity, molality, and mass percent. Also, why polar solvents dissolve polar solutes, and nonpolar solvents dissolve nonpolar...
Instructional Video11:32
Crash Course

Air Travel and The Space Race: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
Like the Industrial or the Einsteinian Revolution, the Space Race is a trope, or way of organizing historical events into a story that makes sense. In this story, the two great powers that emerged after World War Two—the United States...
Instructional Video10:27
Curated Video

Human Population Growth - Crash Course Ecology

12th - Higher Ed
If being alive on Earth were a contest, humans would win it hands down. We're like the Michael Phelps of being alive, but with 250,000 times more gold medals. Today Hank is here to tell us the specifics of why and how human population...