Instructional Video17:34
TED Talks

TED: The birth of virtual reality as an art form | Chris Milk

12th - Higher Ed
Chris Milk uses innovative technologies to make personal, interactive, human stories. Accompanied by Joshua Roman on cello and McKenzie Stubbert on piano, Milk traces his relationship to music and art -- from the first moment he...
Instructional Video4:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Who is Alexander von Humboldt? - George Mehler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Have you heard of Alexander von Humboldt? Not likely. The geologist turned South American explorer was a bit of an 18th century super scientist, traveling over 24,000 miles to understand the relationship between nature and habitat....
Instructional Video12:59
TED Talks

Thomas Insel: Toward a new understanding of mental illness

12th - Higher Ed
Today, thanks to better early detection, there are 63% fewer deaths from heart disease than there were just a few decades ago. Thomas Insel, the director of the National Institute of Mental Health, wonders: Could we do the same for...
Instructional Video12:18
TED Talks

TED: There's more to life than being happy | Emily Esfahani Smith

12th - Higher Ed
Our culture is obsessed with happiness, but what if there's a more fulfilling path? Happiness comes and goes, says writer Emily Esfahani Smith, but having meaning in life -- serving something beyond yourself and developing the best...
Instructional Video15:40
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: Writer Jeremy Smith, Measuring Health & Freya the Pine Snake

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode Hank talks about global medical history and recorded death certificates with journalist Jeremy Smith. Special guest from Animal Wonders and SciShow Kids Jessi Knudsen Castañeda brings Freya the Northern Pine Snake.
Instructional Video8:50
TED Talks

TED: The Sacred Art of the Ori | Laolu Senbanjo

12th - Higher Ed
every artist has a name, and every artist has a story. Laolu Senbanjo's story started in Nigeria, where he was surrounded by the culture and mythology of the Yoruba, and brought him to law school, to New York and eventually to work on...
Instructional Video5:44
SciShow

When Waking up After Decades Turned out to Be Temporary

12th - Higher Ed
Around 1917, an unknown illness dubbed "sleeping sickness" caused people to suffer severe sleepiness and delirium. Some even became paralyzed for decades until a temporary cure was discovered in the 1960s. The story of this illness is...
Instructional Video21:15
TED Talks

The freakonomics of crack dealing - Steven Levitt

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. "Freakonomics" author Steven Levitt presents new data on the finances of drug dealing. Contrary to popular myth, he...
Instructional Video17:50
TED Talks

Shashi Tharoor: Why nations should pursue soft power

12th - Higher Ed
India is fast becoming a superpower, says Shashi Tharoor -- not just through trade and politics, but through "soft" power, its ability to share its culture with the world through food, music, technology, Bollywood. He argues that in the...
Instructional Video3:58
TED Talks

TED: If trees could speak | Elif Shafak

12th - Higher Ed
How do we tell stories of humanity and nature at a time when our planet is burning? Novelist Elif Shafak invites us to listen to the trees, whose experience of time, stillness and impermanence is utterly different from our own. "Hidden...
Instructional Video5:43
PBS

That Time Oxygen Almost Killed Everything

12th - Higher Ed
What if we told you that there was a time when oxygen almost wiped out all life on Earth? 3 billion years ago, when the world was a place you'd never recognize, too much of a good thing almost ruined everything for everybody.
Instructional Video7:42
PBS

Kronos: Devourer Of Worlds

12th - Higher Ed
What happens when a star eats its planets? Find out on today's Space Time Journal Club.
Instructional Video8:53
Crash Course

In the Mood For Love: Crash Course Film Criticism

12th - Higher Ed
Cinematic love stories come in all shapes and sizes. Movies are really good at both capturing and projecting emotions. And one of the best directors at the modern love story is Wong Kar-Wai. In this episode of Crash Course Film...
Instructional Video4:07
TED Talks

JD Schramm: Break the silence for suicide attempt survivors

12th - Higher Ed
Even when our lives appear fine from the outside, locked within can be a world of quiet suffering, leading some to the decision to end their life. At TEDYou, JD Schramm asks us to break the silence surrounding suicide and suicide...
Instructional Video11:03
TED Talks

Boghuma Kabisen Titanji: Ethical riddles in HIV research

12th - Higher Ed
A woman in sub-Saharan Africa is part of a cutting-edge HIV clinical trial -- but she can't afford a bus ticket to her health clinic, let alone the life-saving antiretrovirals she'll need. Boghuma Kabisen Titanji asks an important...
Instructional Video17:12
TED Talks

Julie Burstein: 4 lessons in creativity

12th - Higher Ed
Radio host Julie Burstein talks with creative people for a living -- and shares four lessons about how to create in the face of challenge, self-doubt and loss. Hear insights from filmmaker Mira Nair, writer Richard Ford, sculptor Richard...
Instructional Video22:15
TED Talks

TED: How electroshock therapy changed me | Sherwin Nuland

12th - Higher Ed
Surgeon and author Sherwin Nuland discusses the development of electroshock therapy as a cure for severe, life-threatening depression -- including his own. It's a moving and heartfelt talk about relief, redemption and second chances.
Instructional Video9:39
SciShow

How Did You Get Here?! (Unexpected Ways Species Travel the World)

12th - Higher Ed
Sometimes, species end up in places we wouldn't expect, like when the same or very similar species end up on opposite parts of the globe. It's called disjunct distribution, and here are 6 ways that it can happen.
Instructional Video12:20
PBS

How Sloths Went From the Seas to the Trees

12th - Higher Ed
The story of sloths is one of astounding ecological variability, with some foraging in the seas, others living underground, and others still hiding from predators in towering cliffs. So why are their only living relatives in the trees?
Instructional Video11:17
TED Talks

Photographing the hidden story - Ryan Lobo

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. Ryan Lobo has traveled the world, taking photographs that tell stories of unusual human lives. In this haunting...
Instructional Video4:27
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do dogs "see" with their noses? - Alexandra Horowitz

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You may have heard the expression that dogs 'see with their noses.' But these creature's amazing nasal architecture actually reveals a whole world beyond what we can see. Alexandra Horowitz illustrates how the dog's nose can smell the...
Instructional Video4:49
SciShow

Doggerland: A Real-Life Atlantis

12th - Higher Ed
Though we probably won’t find a literal Atlantis beneath the sea, that doesn’t mean that a human settlement hasn’t ever been lost to the water. Meet Doggerland.
Instructional Video16:08
TED Talks

TED: Averting the climate crisis | Al Gore

12th - Higher Ed
With the same humor and humanity he exuded in "An Inconvenient Truth," Al Gore spells out 15 ways that individuals can address climate change immediately, from buying a hybrid to inventing a new, hotter brand name for global warming.
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

The Ancient Island That Transformed Washington: A SciShow Field Trip #2

12th - Higher Ed
Even though there are no volcanoes on the Olympic Peninsula, you can find lots of volcanic rocks on the beaches. This bizarre circumstance might have to do with how the ancient island transformed Washington state.