Instructional Video5:22
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What really happened to Oedipus? | Stephen Esposito

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When Queen Jocasta of Thebes gave birth to Oedipus, a grim air seized the occasion. Her husband, King Laius, had received a prophecy from Apollo's oracle foretelling that he would die at the hands of his own son. Determined to escape...
Instructional Video14:56
SciShow

How We Get Sick in Space and How to Recover | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
No one likes being sick, but can you imagine catching a bug while hurling through space? Turns out, this is an issue that many space agencies have worked to study and mitigate.
Instructional Video17:04
SciShow

What Will It Be Like To Live on the Moon? | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
The Moon is pretty prime real estate once you get past the lack of oxygen, resources, and general mobility, but if quality of life isn't what you're after, here's how we might make it all work.
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

The Rocket that Hopped

12th - Higher Ed
Surveyor 6 may not have been the first craft to make a soft landing on the Moon, but it is the first craft to take off from the surface of another world. And it did so in a very adorable way. Long before any Apollo astronaut, Surveyor 6...
Instructional Video10:23
Be Smart

Apollo’s Most Important Discovery (Inside NASA’s Moon Rock Vault!)

12th - Higher Ed
Fifty years ago, we sent the first astronauts to walk on the moon’s face. But what they brought back is just as important as what got them there. I’m talking about moon rocks, guys. And I got to go visit NASA’s lunar sample vault to...
Instructional Video6:57
SciShow

The Rocket That Took Tortoises to the Moon

12th - Higher Ed
Months before Apollo 8 took humans around the Moon for the first time, two Russian tortoises (plus some other lunar tourists) had already made it back home. This was Zond 5 — the first mission to return to Earth after visiting another...
Instructional Video34:26
SciShow

Was The Apollo Mission a Mistake? | A SciShow Documentary

12th - Higher Ed
The Apollo program was famous for being risky and expensive. It sent multiple daring astronauts to the moon, but had a crunched timeline, and lacked modern tech. In this special episode of SciShow, we'll be discussing... was the Apollo...
Instructional Video10:18
Crash Course

Mythical Horses: Crash Course World Mythology #37

12th - Higher Ed
Horses have been human companions for thousands of years, and have been essential companions and tools for the development of human culture. So, it makes sense that horses would make their way into our most important stories. Today,...
Instructional Video4:56
PBS

Is William Gibson A Modern Day Oracle?

12th - Higher Ed
The science fiction writer William Gibson has not only written some fantastic scifi novels, but in the process predicted the internet, Miku Hatsune, reality TV, and a crazy amount of other technological and societal developments that...
Instructional Video22:45
SciShow

Here's What It Took to Put Humans on the Moon | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
To freshen up your Apollo knowledge, here is a good dive into the science and engineering that put people on the moon.
Instructional Video11:26
Crash Course

Mythical Trees: Crash Course World Mythology

12th - Higher Ed
This week on CC Myth, Mike Rugnetta is teaching you about mythical trees. There are lots of trees in myth, and we've touched on some of them before, but today we're going to focus on three trees from three different traditions. We'll...
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow

This Might Be a Brand-New Kind of Star | Space News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have theorized about an invisible star made up of theoretic particles in the past, but did we recently detect the gravitational waves of two of them colliding? Plus, extraterrestrial rocks from a decades-old mission keep...
Instructional Video2:54
Be Smart

Why Do We Go to Space?

12th - Higher Ed
Why do we go to space? In the beginning of our space program, the answer had a lot to do with war and paranoia. But with the dawn of the space shuttle, that all changed. Where do we go from here?
Instructional Video11:59
Crash Course

Hermes and Loki and Tricksters Part 2: Crash Course World Mythology

12th - Higher Ed
In which Mike Rugnetta continues to teach you about tricksters. In this episode, we're talking about tricksters as culture heroes. Basically, a culture hero is someone whose creativity adds to their mythological culture. We'll learn how...
Instructional Video9:59
TED Talks

Jason Pontin: Can technology solve our big problems?

12th - Higher Ed
In 1969, Buzz Aldrin’s historical step onto the moon leapt mankind into an era of technological possibility. The awesome power of technology was to be used to solve all of our big problems. Fast forward to present day, and what's...
Instructional Video4:54
SciShow

Why Did We Keep Sealed Moon Samples?

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve been sitting on samples of the lunar surface for decades and, with better technology than when they were taken, we are opening them back up to take another look!
Instructional Video14:02
SciShow

Three Great Minds Behind Apollo 11 | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
It's the 53rd anniversary of the Apollo 11 launch, a monolith in mankind's journey to the stars. Celebrate with this compilation of great minds that lended their knowledge to the momentous event.
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

3 Times We Intentionally Crashed into Other Worlds

12th - Higher Ed
Most of the time, it’s not great when an expensive spacecraft slams into an extraterrestrial body. But now and then mission control intentionally crashes a spacecraft for science!
Instructional Video4:57
TED-Ed

A day in the life of the Oracle of Delphi | Mark Robinson

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As the sun rises over Delphi in 500 BCE, Aristonike hurries to the temple of Apollo where a single oracle known as the Pythia communicates Apollo's will. Reserved only for women, this is the most important job in the city— and one that...
Instructional Video4:59
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Life of an astronaut - Jerry Carr

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Astronaut Jerry Carr knows space. As commander of Skylab, he spent over 2000 hours in space, orbiting the Earth over 1000 times. Recounting his life story, Carr remembers the enchanting years he spent at NASA. Lesson by Jerry Carr,...
Instructional Video11:56
TED Talks

TED: The dream we haven't dared to dream | Dan Pallotta

12th - Higher Ed
What are your dreams? Better yet, what are your broken dreams? Dan Pallotta dreams of a time when we are as excited, curious and scientific about the development of our humanity as we are about the development of our technology. "What we...
Instructional Video4:35
SciShow

Luna 16: The Mission That (Finally) Could

12th - Higher Ed
Before there was a rover named Perseverance, there was a series of missions that earned that name in their own right.
Instructional Video1:52
SciShow

Neil Armstrong Tribute

12th - Higher Ed
Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on a world that was not Earth, has died. Getting his pilot's license before his driver's license probably didn't hurt when it came to becoming one of the world's most famous men - certainly the...
Instructional Video1:03
SciShow

Apollo 11 50th Anniversary Playlist

12th - Higher Ed
50 years ago, humans walked on the moon! Let's celebrate by watching some of our favorite videos about the Apollo missions.