Instructional Video3:32
Teaching Without Frills

How to Write a Research Paper for Kids - Episode 3: Researching

3rd - 5th
In this video, you will learn how to start researching a topic after you make a plan for your animal research paper. We will check to make sure the facts we already knew are really true. Then we'll learn even more information in books,...
Instructional Video7:43
SciShow

The OTHER Genome Project That’s Transforming Medicine

12th - Higher Ed
You've heard of the Human Genome Project, and how having all that info about our genes could help us treat /tons/ of diseases. But a newer project wants to zoom out a little and use different genetic information to help us solve our...
Instructional Video2:47
NASA

How NASA Data Helps Study Animals on the Move

3rd - 11th
MoveBank provides a free online database that enables animal tracking researchers to manage, share, protect, analyze and store their data. The system includes a set of online tools that help ecologists link animal movement data with...
Instructional Video5:19
Science360

Biometrics - Science of Innovation

12th - Higher Ed
A method for capturing and analyzing the vein patterns in the white part of the eye to help identify people. Biometrics has potential applications for driver's licenses, passports or computer identification control. Provided by the...
Instructional Video4:45
Economics Explained

How The Economy Of Japan Could Predict The Next Decade: Is Japan Special?

9th - Higher Ed
Is there something unique about the economy of Japan which is causing this stagnation or is it finally time to admit that endless growth in a finite world is not sustainable for any economy? And if Japan really is just ahead of the...
Instructional Video23:36
TED Talks

TED: How humans and animals can live together | Jane Goodall

12th - Higher Ed
The legendary chimpanzee researcher Jane Goodall talks about TACARE and her other community projects, which help people in booming African towns live side-by-side with threatened animals.
Instructional Video3:20
Science360

DECADES OF BIRD SIGNALS, SONGS DIGITIZED FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH

12th - Higher Ed
The world's largest scientific archive of animal signal recordings, the Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds, is partnering with other institutions to co-curate and digitize an enormous archive of animal audio and video recordings from...
Instructional Video15:31
SciShow

SciShow Quiz Show: Weird Animal Parenting

12th - Higher Ed
How do adult strawberry poison frogs pass on toxins to their tadpoles? What happens when scientists add iodine to axolotl tanks? Find out, as our How To Adult hosts Rachel Calderon-Navarro, Project Manager at DFTBA, and Hank Green face...
Podcast4:11
KERA

A Tiger’s Roar Tells Us a Lot

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You can tell a lot from a tiger’s roar. A researcher in Texas is using the sound of tigers’ vocalizations to track and protect them in national parks and in the wild around the world. By monitoring tigers acoustically, researchers can...
Instructional Video3:17
Science360

Engineering innovative seismic retrofits that don’t break the bank - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers at the state-of-the-art Structural Engineering and Materials Laboratory at the Georgia Institute of Technology are using a full-scale model building to test new ways to protect structures from earthquakes and potentially save...
Instructional Video3:15
NASA

GLOBE Science Fair 2016

3rd - 11th
Students from West Virginia to New Hampshire showed off their scientific research as part of the GLOBE program in a science fair held Friday, March 11, 2016 at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. GLOBE - the Global...
Instructional Video7:02
Australian Children's Television Foundation

Monitoring Manta Ray Populations on Lady Elliot Island

9th - 12th
Season 2, Manta part 2. Kayne and Kamil team up with a research group that is studying manta rays to help preserve the endangered species on Lady Elliott Island. Learn how unique spot and dot patterns on each manta ray's underbelly are...
Instructional Video6:45
Great Big Story

Why We're Hell-Bent on Saving These Giant Salamanders

12th - Higher Ed
Dive into the world of the hellbender, a peculiar-looking salamander, often referred to as the Devil Dog, Snot Otter, or even the Lasagne Lizard. Follow wildlife biologist Wes Larson and researcher Emily Nolan in eastern Tennessee as...
Instructional Video3:32
Ancient Lights Media

US Constitution: The Separation of Powers in the U.S. Government

6th - 8th
Understanding the U.S. Constitution: 13. This clip outlines the structure of the U.S. government. It demonstrates how the three branches of government are designed to be separate from one another.
Instructional Video1:55
National Geographic

Lion Rapid Response Team | Best Job Ever

Pre-K - 11th
Paola Bouley is on call as a first responder for lions in Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique. She is a National Geographic Big Cats Initiative grantee and the director and co-founder of Projecto Leões da Gorongosa. It’s the first ever...
Instructional Video44:07
Natural History Museum

How human activity drives the transmission of infectious diseases from animals | Our Broken Planet

K - 11th
One year on from the emergence of COVID-19, the world is still grappling with the repercussions of a global viral pandemic. To prevent history from repeating itself, we need to understand that only one species is truly responsible for...
Instructional Video1:53
NASA

Two Research Vessels Leave for the Twilight Zone

3rd - 11th
A project jointly funded by NASA and the National Science Foundation is heading west from Seattle, straight for the twilight zone. Using two research vessels, the Export Processes in the Ocean from Remote Sensing (EXPORTS) oceanographic...
Instructional Video6:03
SciShow

NASA Wants to Capture Asteroids…in Bags (And Other New Tech)

12th - Higher Ed
NIAC has awarded their first two grant winners for phase III: optical mining and 3D modeling craters, and researchers are further honing in on how to identify faraway habitable planets.
Instructional Video0:37
Science360

How does this jellyfish sting without touching you?

12th - Higher Ed
In warm coastal waters around the world, swimmers can often spot large groups of jellyfish pulsing rhythmically on the seafloor. Unless properly prepared with protective clothing, it is best to steer clear of areas that Cassiopea, or...
Instructional Video3:02
Science360

Soft “vine robots” grow into solutions - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Engineers design vine-like, inflatable, plastic bots that can change shape to solve problems. Description: Animals inspire many designs for robots, from the gecko-inspired StickyBot to RoboBees. But mechanical engineers at Stanford...
Instructional Video2:48
Science360

XROMM PUTS BIOMECHANICS ON THE FAST TRACK

12th - Higher Ed
The protective shells that have helped keep turtles around for millions of years have also kept scientists guessing about just what's going on inside. With support from the National Science Foundation, biologist Elizabeth Brainerd and...
Instructional Video1:00
Kids Learning Videos

Row Row Row Your Boat Song

Pre-K - K
Row Row Row Your Boat! Lyrics: Row, row, row your boat Gently down the stream Merrily merrily merrily merrily Life is but a dream
Instructional Video5:29
Curated Video

Using Tables to Determine Unit Rates

K - 5th
In this video, we compare different quantities, such as gallons of gas to lawns mowed and teaspoons of medicine to ounces of orange juice. The teacher demonstrates how to set up the table, perform the necessary calculations, and find the...
Instructional Video3:10
National Geographic

Giant Underwater Cave Was Hiding Oldest Human Skeleton in the Americas | Expedition Raw

Pre-K - 11th
In a pitch black, 140-foot-deep underwater cave, three divers make a stunning 13,000-year-old discovery: the oldest complete human skeleton ever found in the Americas. In this video, see the ancient remains, venture through the...