Instructional Video3:09
MinutePhysics

Immovable Object vs. Unstoppable Force - Which Wins

12th - Higher Ed
Immovable Object vs. Unstoppable Force - Which Wins
Instructional Video6:20
TED Talks

Bridging the Divide: Emerging Leaders, Political Polarization, and the Future of U.S. Democracy

12th - Higher Ed
President and founder of Eurasia Group and GZERO Media Ian Bremmer discusses the potential for emerging leaders in American politics who can build bridges, citing a few modern figures as examples. While he acknowledges a new generation...
Instructional Video5:50
SciShow

Why NASA Put The Moon In A Pool

12th - Higher Ed
NASA has been using swimming pools to train astronauts since the 1960s. The largest is the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory (NBL), which holds roughly 9 olympic pools worth of water and has contained not just mockups of space station and...
Instructional Video11:34
TED Talks

TED: How business leaders can renew democracy | Daniella Ballou-Aares

12th - Higher Ed
How much should business leaders speak out about threats to democracy? It's a question many corporations are wrestling with these days. Business and democracy leader Daniella Ballou-Aares shows why companies have both the ability and the...
Instructional Video4:58
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How to make smart decisions more easily | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Everything our bodies do— whether physical or mental— uses energy. Studies have found that many individuals seem to have a daily threshold for making decisions, and an extended period of decision-making can lead to cognitive exhaustion....
Instructional Video3:24
SciShow

The Nuclear Bunker Full of Cannibal Ants

12th - Higher Ed
There's an abandoned Soviet nuclear bunker in Poland full of cannibal ants. And weird as it sounds, it's helping us learn more about the behavior of social insects.
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

The Sexually Transmitted ... Sandwich?

12th - Higher Ed
When you're enjoying an intimate moment with that special someone, the peanut butter and jelly sandwich you ate for lunch is probably the last thing on your mind. But sexually transmitted allergens are a thing, and nut allergies aren't...
Instructional Video8:51
SciShow

Why Your Strawberry Milk May Look Different Soon

12th - Higher Ed
Popular food dyes Red 3 and titanium dioxide are in everything from toothpaste to your strawberry milk. But multiple U.S. states and the EU are trying to ban them. Are they safe?
Instructional Video10:42
TED Talks

TED: The growing megafire crisis -- and how to contain it | George T. Whitesides

12th - Higher Ed
Megafires, or fires that burn more than 100,000 acres, are becoming more frequent worldwide, wreaking havoc on landscapes and communities -- and fire experts say the problem is only going to get worse. George T. Whitesides is focused on...
Instructional Video6:30
SciShow

Corn Shouldn't Be Food, But It Is

12th - Higher Ed
You probably have a bag of frozen corn in your freezer, or have chowed down on a buttery ear of corn at a cookout. But not only did it take thousands of years for humans to domesticate teosinte to corral it into what we now know as corn,...
Instructional Video10:43
SciShow

How Math Can Help Decode Art

12th - Higher Ed
Even though math and art feel like polar opposites, it turns out computer algorithms and calculations can help us see masterpieces in a new light. From using wavelet decomposition to study Van Gogh to using convolutional filters in...
Instructional Video8:16
SciShow

How Does Chickenpox Turn Into Shingles?

12th - Higher Ed
You might know that chickenpox and shingles are both caused by the same virus, varicella zoster. Here's why the symptoms, and even the vaccines, are different the second time around.
Instructional Video5:17
SciShow

This Parasitic Plant Stole Over 100 Genes From Other Plants | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Plants may not seem like they live the most exciting lives, but two new papers published this week point to different types of plants that are actually very cunning and manipulative. One, the parasitic dodder, steals both nutrients and...
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

New Insights Into What Fruit Fly Sex Is Like

12th - Higher Ed
It's the year 2018, and we now know that flies like to ejaculate. But how does this tie into our understanding of addiction?
Instructional Video4:28
SciShow

Liquid Water on Mars

12th - Higher Ed
Today, NASA announced that there is...occasionally...flowing, liquid water on the surface of Mars. What?!
Instructional Video5:38
SciShow

Is the Mystery of Earth's 1.2 Billion Missing Years Solved? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
For the last hundred and fifty years or so, geologists have been trying to wrap their heads around the mystery: in some places, the geologic record just seems to jump by over billion years. And last week, a paper was published that may...
Instructional Video4:58
SciShow

How Does Cold Medicine Work?

12th - Higher Ed
The cold medicine you picked up at the store involves some cool chemistry to treat your symptoms. *Correction: This episode was written by Alison Caldwell.
Instructional Video2:01
SciShow

Can Gargling Salt Water Cure a Sore Throat?

12th - Higher Ed
Gargling with warm saltwater for a sore throat is a remedy commonly known and loved by doctors, and there is some evidence to back it up, but it’s not a cure.
Instructional Video9:07
SciShow

7 Unbelievably Hardcore Ants

12th - Higher Ed
The ant world is an incredible, dangerous, and downright bizarre place. Some ants, though, are a lot cooler and more resourceful than you might give them credit for.
Instructional Video4:05
SciShow

Where Did That One Thick, Dark Hair Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
Some days you look in the mirror and find a long dark hair where it didn't use to be. Maybe you're going through puberty, pregnancy, or menopause. Maybe you're not. But either way, that hair didn't appear out of nowhere. It just went...
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

Biofluorescence: A Neon World Hidden in Plain Sight

12th - Higher Ed
Lots of life on Earth can fluoresce, creating a beautiful neon world of camouflage, communication, and adaptation that is hidden from the human eye.
Instructional Video5:27
SciShow

Bdelloids: The Most Hardcore Animals in the World?

12th - Higher Ed
Bdelloid rotifers have a superpower. If their DNA is shredded to pieces, whether from a lack of water or a blast of radiation, they can put it back together. Hosted by: Hank Green
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

We Might Be Totally Wrong About Alzheimer’s

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists found that the prevailing hypothesis of how the Alzheimer’s disease starts might be wrong, and some viruses could be the culprit.
Instructional Video2:35
SciShow

These Frogs Hide Thanks to Transparent Skin

12th - Higher Ed
Hanging out in the trees of Central and South America are some frogs with pretty unusual coloration. Which is to say, parts of them have no color at all. Their bellies are completely see-through!