Instructional Video3:54
Be Smart

How Ingenious Animals Have Engineered Air Conditioning

12th - Higher Ed
Are humans nature's greatest architects? When we look elsewhere in nature, we find some pretty amazing animal architects. Species like ants, termites, prairie dogs, birds, and more have engineered some incredible structures. This week we...
Instructional Video4:01
SciShow

Cosmic Shear: Revealing the Invisible Universe

12th - Higher Ed
What exactly are the invisible things out there, and how did they help form the universe as we know it? To explore and understand the most spectacular structures out there, scientists have been using cosmic shear to indirectly detect...
Instructional Video12:43
PBS

Will We Ever Find Alien Life?

12th - Higher Ed
The silence of the galaxy and the resulting Fermi Paradox has perplexed us for nearly 50 years. But our most recent surveys of the Milky Way finally allow us to draw scientific conclusions about the depressingly persistent absence of...
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

Our New Galactic Neighborhood, and a Tar Comet?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space shares the latest news from around the universe, including new insights into the giant supercluster of galaxies that we call home, and the first "data baby" from Rosetta's rendezvous with a comet.
Instructional Video3:12
SciShow

Buddha's Birthplace, Poop Transplants & 'Cryptic Cats'

12th - Higher Ed
Michael Aranda relays the latest in science news, including an archaeological discovery about the earliest days of Buddhism, a new species of Brazilian wildcat, and new insights into the effects of fecal transplants.
Instructional Video11:11
SciShow

7 Nests That Will Change How You Think of Birds

12th - Higher Ed
There are estimated to be over 18,000 different bird species with a wide variety of nest shapes and sizes. From teeny, adorable cups to massive compost mounds, the diversity of birds’ nests is definitely impressive. Chapters 1 BALD...
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is the biggest single-celled organism? - Murry Gans

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The elephant is a creature of epic proportions -- and yet, it owes its enormity to more than 1,000 trillion microscopic cells. And on the epically small end of things, there are likely millions of unicellular species, yet there are very...
Instructional Video10:55
SciShow

5 Strangely Familiar Ancient Animals

12th - Higher Ed
Once evolution finds a trick that works, it tends to repeat it. Here are a few examples of prehistoric animals that look a lot like ones we know today. chapters 0:00 0:06 0:13 0:20 0:27 0:34
Instructional Video16:48
TED Talks

Thomas Heatherwick: Building the Seed Cathedral

12th - Higher Ed
A future more beautiful? Architect Thomas Heatherwick shows five recent projects featuring ingenious bio-inspired designs. Some are remakes of the ordinary: a bus, a bridge, a power station ... And one is an extraordinary pavilion, the...
Instructional Video8:48
SciShow

How Encryption Keeps Your Data Safe

12th - Higher Ed
Keeping our data safe and secure is necessary in today's world, but a lot of the encryption we depend on has been in development for thousands of years!
Instructional Video16:14
TED Talks

Mina Bissell: Experiments that point to a new understanding of cancer

12th - Higher Ed
For decades, researcher Mina Bissell pursued a revolutionary idea -- that a cancer cell doesn't automatically become a tumor, but rather, depends on surrounding cells (its microenvironment) for cues on how to develop. She shares the two...
Instructional Video6:37
SciShow

DNA and Dung Beetles

12th - Higher Ed
Chapters View all CARL LINNAEUS 1:24 20% OF KNOWN SPECIES 1:38 NOT 100 MILLION 1:51 DEEP SEA LOBSTERS 2:25 VENEZUELAN SNAIL 2:28 FISH COUNT 2:39
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The left brain vs. right brain myth - Elizabeth Waters

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The human brain is visibly split into a left and right side. This structure has inspired one of the most pervasive ideas about the brain: that the left side controls logic and the right side controls creativity. And yet, this is a myth,...
Instructional Video4:47
SciShow

The Engineering Secrets of the World's Toughest Beetle

12th - Higher Ed
This arthropod may look modest, but it actually used brilliant engineering to become the world’s most resilient beetle - and we might be able to use its design for our own engineering purposes.
Instructional Video5:56
SciShow

These Adorable Wolves Play Fetch – And Defy Dogma | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
We thought that we taught dogs how to play fetch, but some adorable wolf pups may have just proved us wrong. Also some plants may be immortal?
Instructional Video4:02
SciShow

The 3 Coolest Things Built By Bugs

12th - Higher Ed
Long before there were strip malls, skyscrapers, and combination Pizza Hut/Taco Bells, nature had its own architects: all kinds of creatures create all kinds of structures for living, raising offspring, or maybe just the occasional...
Instructional Video19:58
3Blue1Brown

Gradient descent, how neural networks learn: Deep learning - Part 2 of 4

12th - Higher Ed
An overview of gradient descent in the context of neural networks. This is a method used widely throughout machine learning for optimizing how a computer performs on certain tasks.
Instructional Video21:00
3Blue1Brown

Gradient descent, how neural networks learn | Chapter 2, deep learning

12th - Higher Ed
An overview of gradient descent in the context of neural networks. This is a method used widely throughout machine learning for optimizing how a computer performs on certain tasks.
Instructional Video17:03
TED Talks

Andrew Mwenda: Aid for Africa? No thanks.

12th - Higher Ed
In this provocative talk, journalist Andrew Mwenda asks us to reframe the "African question" -- to look beyond the media's stories of poverty, civil war and helplessness and see the opportunities for creating wealth and happiness...
Instructional Video10:03
SciShow

The Microscope That Uses Quantum Physics to Trace Atoms

12th - Higher Ed
In the late 1970s, two physicists in Switzerland set out to invent a new type of microscope using quantum physics that would allow them to do something no one had ever done before: see the individual atoms in a sheet of metal.
Instructional Video19:49
TED Talks

Deb Roy: The birth of a word

12th - Higher Ed
MIT researcher Deb Roy wanted to understand how his infant son learned language -- so he wired up his house with videocameras to catch every moment (with exceptions) of his son's life, then parsed 90,000 hours of home video to watch...
Instructional Video3:22
SciShow

4 Awesome Future Space Missions

12th - Higher Ed
Hank fills us in on the four exploratory missions to space that he is most excited about - New Horizons is going to Pluto and the Kuiper belt; Juno is on it's way to Jupiter; Dawn is exploring two large asteroids; Rosetta will land on a...
Instructional Video8:47
Amoeba Sisters

Specialized Cells: Significance and Examples

12th - Higher Ed
Explore some examples of specialized plant and animal cells with the Amoeba Sisters! Video explains how specialized cell structure suits their function. Table of Contents: Intro 00:00 Specialized Cell Defined 0:26 Animal and Plant Cells...
Instructional Video4:49
TED-Ed

Why do we hiccup? - John Cameron

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The longest recorded case of hiccups lasted for 68 years - and was caused by a falling hog. While that level of severity is extremely uncommon, most of us are no stranger to an occasional case of the hiccups. But what causes these "hics"...