Instructional Video14:55
TED Talks

TED: How digital DNA could help you make better health choices | Jun Wang

12th - Higher Ed
What if you could know exactly how food or medication would impact your health -- before you put it in your body? Genomics researcher Jun Wang is working to develop digital doppelgangers for real people; they start with genetic code, but...
Instructional Video12:07
Crash Course

Zola, France, Realism, and Naturalism: Crash Course Theater #31

12th - Higher Ed
This week, we're back in Europe to learn about Realism and Naturalism. In the 19th Century, playwrights like Eugene Scribe, Alexandre de Dumas Fils, and Emile Zola remade the French theater, first with Realism, and later with Naturalism....
Instructional Video11:46
TED Talks

TED: How we could better predict and stop floods | Virginia Smith

12th - Higher Ed
From village to metropolis, global flooding is on the rise, and traditional approaches to managing the swells won't cut it, says water resource engineer Virginia Smith. Giving an overview of the dynamic shift needed to stymie the flow of...
Instructional Video11:30
TED Talks

TED: The ancient, earth-friendly wisdom of Mongolian nomads | Khulan Batkhuyag

12th - Higher Ed
There's a lot we can learn from Mongolian nomads about how to survive in the years to come, says environmental activist Khulan Batkhuyag. Taking us on a journey through the country's stunning rural landscape, she shows how Mongolian...
Instructional Video11:54
TED Talks

TED: What it feels like to see earth from space | Benjamin Grant

12th - Higher Ed
What the astronauts felt when they saw earth from space changed them forever. Author and artist Benjamin Grant aims to provoke this same feeling of overwhelming scale and beauty in each of us through a series of stunning satellite images...
Instructional Video2:19
SciShow

These Bats Make Tiny Snow Caves

12th - Higher Ed
One might not think that snow could help anything stay warm through a harsh winter, but these tiny bats have found a way to utilize the insulation provided by the snow: they make little forts to wait out the winter.
Instructional Video2:23
TED Talks

TED: A new way to restore Earth's biodiversity -- from the air | Susan Graham

12th - Higher Ed
Land restoration is about more than planting trees, says environmentalist Susan Graham. Check out how her team combines drone technology with ecology-trained AI to restore degraded land and revive complex, biodiverse ecosystems --...
Instructional Video2:54
MinuteEarth

The Department of Redundancy Department

12th - Higher Ed
Who needs redundancy? Well, everyone, it turns out.
Instructional Video14:16
TED Talks

TED: A new way to remove CO2 from the atmosphere | Jennifer Wilcox

12th - Higher Ed
Our planet has a carbon problem -- if we don't start removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, we'll grow hotter, faster. Chemical engineer Jennifer Wilcox previews some amazing technology to scrub carbon from the air, using chemical...
Instructional Video13:58
TED Talks

TED: How fear of nuclear power is hurting the environment | Michael Shellenberger

12th - Higher Ed
We're not in a clean energy revolution; we're in a clean energy crisis, says climate policy expert Michael Shellenberger. His surprising solution: nuclear. In this passionate talk, he explains why it's time to overcome longstanding fears...
Instructional Video5:07
SciShow

Vikings, Volcanoes, and Sheep: How Geology Rewrites Ancient History

12th - Higher Ed
Vikings, volcanoes, and sheep don’t immediately seem like they should all be connected, but this unlikely trio is actually informing our knowledge of global history.
Instructional Video7:27
TED Talks

TED: This decade calls for Earthshots to repair our planet | Prince William

12th - Higher Ed
We start this new decade knowing that it is the most consequential period in history, says Prince William, The Duke of Cambridge. Inspired by President John F. Kennedy's "Moonshot," he calls on us all to rise to our greatest challenge...
Instructional Video10:07
Bozeman Science

Biogeochemical Cycling

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how biogeochemical cycling is used to move nutrients from the environment into living material and back again. He explains the water cycle, the carbon cycle, the nitrogen cycle and the phosphorus cycle. He also...
Instructional Video2:47
MinuteEarth

The Actual Reason Men Die First

12th - Higher Ed
Because females often outlive males, behavior is often blamed - but there is a decent chance our sex chromosomes might be to blame instead.
Instructional Video11:55
TED Talks

Simon Sinek: Why good leaders make you feel safe

12th - Higher Ed
What makes a great leader? Management theorist Simon Sinek suggests, it’s someone who makes their employees feel secure, who draws staffers into a circle of trust. But creating trust and safety — especially in an uneven economy — means...
Instructional Video4:52
Bozeman Science

Conservation Laws

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the energy, charge, and momentum in a system is conserved over time.
Instructional Video4:48
MinuteEarth

How to Work From Home as a Team

12th - Higher Ed
We've worked as a team - remotely - for seven years, and we're sharing some of our favorite tips for making it work.
Instructional Video6:06
SciShow

We Solved the Mystery of the Dying Birds

12th - Higher Ed
Across the southeastern United States, bald eagles have been dying unexplainedly for the past 25 years. In March of 2021, researchers announced that they had found the killer, and they hope we can use this knowledge to better protect...
Instructional Video4:54
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The nurdles' quest for ocean domination - Kim Preshoff

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Nurdles are the tiny, factory-made pellets that form the raw material for every plastic product that we use, from toys to toothbrushes. And while they look pretty harmless on land, they can really wreak havoc on our oceans. Kim Preshoff...
Instructional Video14:36
MinuteEarth

MinuteEarth Explains: Battle of the Sexes

12th - Higher Ed
In this collection of classic MinuteEarth videos, we take a look at how deep the divide between males and females actually goes.
Instructional Video3:33
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Self-assembly: The power of organizing the unorganized - Skylar Tibbits

Pre-K - Higher Ed
From something as familiar as our bodies to things vast as the formation of galaxies, we can observe the process of self-assembly, or when unordered parts come together in an organized structure. Skylar Tibbits explains how we see...
Instructional Video18:15
TED Talks

Jared Diamond: Why do societies collapse?

12th - Higher Ed
Why do societies fail? With lessons from the Norse of Iron Age Greenland, deforested Easter Island and present-day Montana, Jared Diamond talks about the signs that collapse is near, and how -- if we see it in time -- we can prevent it.
Instructional Video10:18
TED Talks

Hendrik Poinar: Bring back the woolly mammoth!

12th - Higher Ed
It’s the dream of kids all around the world to see giant beasts walk the Earth again. Could -- and should -- that dream be realized? Hendrik Poinar talks about the next big thing: the quest to engineer a creature that looks very much...
Instructional Video13:37
TED Talks

TED: 4 ways we can avoid a catastrophic drought | David Sedlak

12th - Higher Ed
As the world's climate patterns continue to shift unpredictably, places where drinking water was once abundant may soon find reservoirs dry and groundwater aquifers depleted. In this talk, civil and environmental engineer David Sedlak...