Instructional Video2:10
MinutePhysics

TOP 10 REASONS Why We Know the Earth is Round

12th - Higher Ed
TOP 10 REASONS Why We Know the Earth is Round
Instructional Video4:59
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Does math have a major flaw? | Jacqueline Doan and Alex Kazachek

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A mathematician with a knife and ball begins slicing and distributing the ball into an infinite number of boxes. She then recombines the parts into five precise sections. Moving and rotating these sections around, she recombines them to...
Instructional Video5:50
SciShow

What's Going to Space in 2023?

12th - Higher Ed
2022 was a pretty exciting year for space science, but what news might we expect in the coming year?
Instructional Video13:11
PBS

The NEW Warp Drive Possibilities

12th - Higher Ed
That Einstein guy was a real bummer for our hopes of a star-hopping, science-fiction-y future. His whole “nothing travels faster than light” rule seems to ensure that exploration of even the local part of our galaxy will be an...
Instructional Video22:37
Be Smart

The Golden Ratio: Is It Myth or Math?

12th - Higher Ed
The golden ratio. Some say it’s the most mythical number in the universe. Others say it underlies everything from nature’s patterns to beauty in art and design. But, like, what is it? And does the myth of the golden ratio hold up to its...
Instructional Video7:51
SciShow

4 Weird Unsolved Mysteries of Math

12th - Higher Ed
There are lots of unsolved mysteries in the world of math, and many of them start off with a deceptively simple premise, like: What's the biggest couch you can slide around a 90-degree corner? Hosted by: Michael Aranda
Instructional Video3:59
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...
News Clip6:41
PBS

Thinking about math in terms of literacy - not levels

12th - Higher Ed
Algebra is a core subject for U.S. high school students. But should it be? Author Andrew Hacker believes we should reconsider how math is taught: only 5 percent of the American workforce actually uses math beyond arithmetic, though...
Instructional Video5:54
Bozeman Science

Why Are Cells Small?

12th - Higher Ed
The lower half of Mr. Andersen's head explains why cells are small. This video begins with a simple geometry problem and ends with a discussion of Allen's Rule and reasoning for the microscopic nature of cells.
Instructional Video12:13
PBS

Did Dark Energy Just Disappear?

12th - Higher Ed
Why are we talking about dark energy again? Because another team has just announced a new analysis of updated supernova data. They claim that the data are consistent with there being NO dark energy - no accelerating expansion. They...
Instructional Video5:15
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Einstein's miracle year - Larry Lagerstrom

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As the year 1905 began, Albert Einstein faced life as a "failed" academic. Yet within the next twelve months, he would publish four extraordinary papers, each on a different topic, that were destined to radically transform our...
Instructional Video3:32
Be Smart

A Slice of Pizza Science!

12th - Higher Ed
How does math keep a folded slice from drooping? And what does pizza have to do with the speed of light?
Instructional Video9:35
3Blue1Brown

The hardest problem on the hardest test

12th - Higher Ed
A geometry/probability question on the Putnam, a famously hard test, about a random tetrahedron in a sphere. This offers an opportunity not just for a lesson about the problem, but about problem-solving tactics in general.
Instructional Video11:15
3Blue1Brown

The hardest problem on the hardest test

12th - Higher Ed
A geometry/probability question on the Putnam, a famously hard test, about a random tetrahedron in a sphere. This offers an opportunity not just for a lesson about the problem, but about problem-solving tactics in general.
Instructional Video17:07
TED Talks

TED: Fractals and the art of roughness | Benoit Mandelbrot

12th - Higher Ed
At TED2010, mathematics legend Benoit Mandelbrot develops a theme he first discussed at TED in 1984 -- the extreme complexity of roughness, and the way that fractal math can find order within patterns that seem unknowably complicated.
Instructional Video15:23
TED Talks

Margaret Wertheim: The beautiful math of coral

12th - Higher Ed
Margaret Wertheim leads a project to re-create the creatures of the coral reefs using a crochet technique invented by a mathematician -- celebrating the amazements of the reef, and deep-diving into the hyperbolic geometry underlying...
Instructional Video4:09
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Can you solve the buried treasure riddle? - Daniel Griller

Pre-K - Higher Ed
After a massive storm tears through the Hex Archipelago, you find five grizzled survivors in the water. As an act of gratitude for saving them, they reveal a secret _ the island they were just on holds some buried treasure. But when the...
Instructional Video1:49
3Blue1Brown

A Curious Pattern Indeed

12th - Higher Ed
Moser's circle problem. What is this pattern: 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 31,...
Instructional Video19:03
3Blue1Brown

Why is pi here? And why is it squared? A geometric answer to the Basel problem

12th - Higher Ed
A beautiful solution to the Basel Problem (1+1/4+1/9+1/16+...) using Euclidian geometry. Unlike many more common proofs, this one makes it very clear why pi is involved in the answer.
Instructional Video8:18
TED Talks

Skylar Tibbits: The emergence of "4D printing"

12th - Higher Ed
3D printing has grown in sophistication since the late 1970s; TED Fellow Skylar Tibbits is shaping the next development, which he calls 4D printing, where the fourth dimension is time. This emerging technology will allow us to print...
Instructional Video7:51
SciShow

4 Weird Unsolved Mysteries of Math

12th - Higher Ed
There are lots of unsolved mysteries in the world of math, and many of them start off with a deceptively simple premise, like: What's the biggest couch you can slide around a 90-degree corner? Chapters MOVING SOFA PROBLEM 0:35 MOSER'S...
Instructional Video4:54
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The first asteroid ever discovered - Carrie Nugent

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Over the course of history, we've discovered hundreds of thousands of asteroids. But how do astronomers discover these bits of rock and metal? How many have they found? And how do they tell asteroids apart? Carrie Nugent shares the story...
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 Video3:32
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Football physics: The "impossible" free kick - Erez Garty

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1997, Brazilian football player Roberto Carlos set up for a 35 meter free kick with no direct line to the goal. Carlos's shot sent the ball flying wide of the players, but just before going out of bounds it hooked to the left and...