Instructional Video4:12
SciShow

How Dogs Really Listen to Us, and How Pufferfish Puff

12th - Higher Ed
This week on SciShow News: Animals! New research has found how dogs actually listen to us in more complex ways than you probably thought, and also figured out how a kind of pufferfish gets its puff up.
Instructional Video4:25
SciShow

Do Animals Appreciate Music?

12th - Higher Ed
Animals might be music lovers, but how can we know? Is the ability to perceive and appreciate music a shared human and animal experience?
Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

How Dogs Really Listen to Us, and How Pufferfish Puff

12th - Higher Ed
This week on SciShow News: Animals! New research has found how dogs actually listen to us in more complex ways than you probably thought, and also figured out how a kind of pufferfish gets its puff up.
Instructional Video7:56
TED Talks

TED: TED's secret to great public speaking | Chris Anderson

12th - Higher Ed
There's no single formula for a great talk, but there is a secret ingredient that all the best ones have in common. TED curator Chris Anderson shares this secret -- along with four ways to make it work for you. Do you have what it takes...
Instructional Video10:56
TED Talks

Who counts as a speaker of a language? | Anna Babel

12th - Higher Ed
Backed by research and personal anecdotes, Spanish professor Anna Babel reveals the intricate relationship between language and culture, showing how social categories and underlying biases influence the way we hear, regard and,...
Instructional Video13:43
TED Talks

Woody Norris: Hypersonic sound and other inventions

12th - Higher Ed
Woody Norris shows off two of his inventions that use sound in new ways, including the Long Range Acoustic Device, or LRAD. He talks about his untraditional approach to inventing and education, because, as he puts it: "Almost nothing has...
Instructional Video6:20
Instructional Video12:01
TED Talks

Fabian Oefner: Psychedelic science

12th - Higher Ed
Swiss artist and photographer Fabian Oefner is on a mission to make eye-catching art from everyday science. In this charming talk, he shows off some recent psychedelic images, including photographs of crystals as they interact with...
Instructional Video6:09
Bozeman Science

Wave-Particle Duality - Part 1

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the wave-particle duality discovered by scientists. In certain situations particles (like electrons and photons) display wave like properties. This phenomenon can best be explored using the double...
Instructional Video4:47
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: 4 things all great listeners know | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's easy to tell when someone's not paying attention, but it can be surprisingly tricky to know what good listening looks like. Good listening is one of the most important things we can do to improve our relationships, develop our...
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

Why We’re Bad at Guessing Other People’s Motives

12th - Higher Ed
Reading someone’s mind is an impossible task, but even just guessing at why they do the things they do is a lot harder than it might seem.
Instructional Video2:44
SciShow

Why Do We Talk To Dogs Like That

12th - Higher Ed
Why is it that every time you see an adorable puppy in the park or outside a cafe your voice suddenly jumps up about two octaves and you’re talking total gooey nonsense? If you watch this episode to find out, you can have a treat and...
Instructional Video5:56
TED Talks

Sebastian Wernicke: Lies, damned lies and statistics (about TEDTalks)

12th - Higher Ed
In a brilliantly tongue-in-cheek analysis, Sebastian Wernicke turns the tools of statistical analysis on TEDTalks, to come up with a metric for creating "the optimum TEDTalk" based on user ratings. How do you rate it? "Jaw-dropping"?...
Instructional Video5:15
TED-Ed

Why do we, like, hesitate when we, um, speak? | Lorenzo García-Amaya

Pre-K - Higher Ed
For as long as we've had language, some people have tried to control it. And some of the most frequent targets of this communication regulation are the ums, ers, and likes that pepper our conversations. These linguistic fillers occur...
Instructional Video2:45
SciShow

Why Do Geiger Counters Make That Clicking Sound?

12th - Higher Ed
You don't have to fight feral ghouls to be familiar with the clicking sound of a geiger counter, but what exactly makes these radiation detecting devices click?
Instructional Video2:58
TED Talks

TED: Kids are speaking up for the environment. Let's listen | Olafur Eliasson

12th - Higher Ed
Known for big, attention-grabbing installations -- like his four towering waterfalls in New York's East River -- Olafur Eliasson has scaled down his latest project, Earth Speakr: an art platform for kids designed to spur budding climate...
Instructional Video4:55
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How interpreters juggle two languages at once - Ewandro Magalhaes

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Language is complex, and when abstract or nuanced concepts get lost in translation, the consequences may be catastrophic. Given the complexities of language and cultural exchange, how do these epic miscommunications not happen all the...
Instructional Video4:35
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What Aristotle and Joshua Bell can teach us about persuasion - Conor Neill

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Imagine you are one of the world's greatest violin players, and you decide to conduct an experiment: play inside a subway station and see if anyone stops to appreciate when you are stripped of a concert hall and name recognition. Joshua...
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow

Should You Stop Saying 'Like' and 'Um'?

12th - Higher Ed
Y’know lots of people say you shouldn’t use, like...filler words, but uh, should you really like, stop using them?
Instructional Video14:52
TED Talks

TED: This is your brain on communication | uri Hasson

12th - Higher Ed
Neuroscientist uri Hasson researches the basis of human communication, and experiments from his lab reveal that even across different languages, our brains show similar activity, or become "aligned," when we hear the same idea or story....
Instructional Video3:23
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is verbal irony? - Christopher Warner

Pre-K - Higher Ed
At face value, the lines between verbal irony, sarcasm, and compliments can be blurry. After all, the phrase 'That looks nice' could be all three depending on the circumstances. In the final of a three part series on irony, Christopher...
Instructional Video12:58
Curated Video

U.S. Presidential Line of Succession

6th - Higher Ed
U.S. Presidential Line of Succession
Instructional Video2:46
Curated Video

Hi-Fi Engineering

6th - 12th
A demonstration of how hi-fi speakers use a clever combination of electronics and magnetism to convert electrical impulses into sound waves, which our brain then interprets as music. Physics - Electricity And Circuits - Learning Points....
Instructional Video5:35
Curated Video

Dancing Polymer

6th - 12th
We create a polymer using cornflour and water called oobleck. Oobleck is a non-Newtonian liquid that behaves like a solid and a liquid. When placed on a speaker, the vibrations cause the polymer to constantly change its behaviour and it...