Instructional Video1:23
Atomi

Meet Atomi - the interactive learning platform for schools

9th - 11th
Introducing Atomi! More content than ever with intelligently adaptive interactive quizzes. With simple class management that lets you track your students' progress. So you can spend time on the things that matter. 👊 Check us out at:...
Instructional Video2:28
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Ann Sørum Michaelsen - Teachers Make a Difference - Svein Johansen

Higher Ed
Ann S. Michaelsen, is an administrator, teacher and author of 2 books. She is currently working at Sandvika vgs, a high school in Norway. Sandvika is a high school with 850 students in the age group 16 to 19. The school is situated close...
Instructional Video7:09
Big Think

Truth Isn't Black and White: 3 Requirements Every Fact Should Meet | Katherine Maher

6th - 11th
New videos DAILY: https://bigth.ink/youtube Join Big Think Edge for exclusive videos: https://bigth.ink/Edge ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------...
Instructional Video5:26
Curated Video

The unseen face of meth use

9th - 11th
What does a meth user look like? You’re probably not picturing Courtney – and that’s one reason why it’s so important to hear his story. In the 1990s and early 2000s, meth became the most widely used illicit drug among urban gay men....
Instructional Video6:35
Brainwaves Video Anthology

David Gillborn - Teachers Make a Difference

Higher Ed
David is Professor of Critical Race Studies, editor-in-chief of the journal Race Ethnicity and Education and Director of Research in the School of EducationDavid’s research focuses on race inequalities in education, especially the role...
Instructional Video1:55
National Geographic

Watch These Cave Divers’ Epic Climb to Dark Star | National Geographic

Pre-K - 11th
Just reaching one of Dark Star’s seven known entrances is tough. The monstrous remote cave in Uzbekistan, one of the world’s deepest high-altitude cave systems, can’t be attained without rock-climbing skills and equipment. ➡ Subscribe:...
Instructional Video1:55
National Geographic

Watch These Cave Divers’ Epic Climb to Dark Star | National Geographic

Pre-K - 11th
Just reaching one of Dark Star’s seven known entrances is tough. The monstrous remote cave in Uzbekistan, one of the world’s deepest high-altitude cave systems, can’t be attained without rock-climbing skills and equipment. ➡ Subscribe:...
Instructional Video0:53
Kids’ Poems and Stories With Michael Rosen

Introduction Song | POEM | Kids' Poems and Stories With Michael Rosen

Pre-K - 5th
Introduction Song | POEM | Kids' Poems and Stories With Michael Rosen from ‘Even My Ears Are Smiling’ (Bloomsbury). Going to use my feet today Don’t know who I’ll meet today Going to keep the beat today Going to use my feet today Going...
Instructional Video3:49
Life Noggin

What If You Only Used Thanksgiving Food To Stop a Fire?

3rd - 9th
The turkey is burning, and so is your house! Could one food on the thanksgiving table stop a fire? Watch more: What Would Happen If You Never Stopped Eating? ►► https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QQP6c_xLetk Get our Life Noggin Merch! -...
Instructional Video1:56
TED-Ed

How Blue Jeans Were Invented

7th - 12th
Can you even imagine life without blue jeans? Viewers get the goods on this oh so American apparel from a short video that traces the origins of these durable duds.
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

What Is the Biggest Single-Celled Organism?

7th - 12th
Meet Caulerpa taxifolia, believed to be the largest single-celled organism in the world. How does it work and where is it found? Learn all about this invasive algae and why it is so successful.
Instructional Video4:07
TED-Ed

How Mucus Keeps Us Healthy

6th - 8th
Meet Mucus, the shape-shifting super fluid that heroically lubricates and keeps the body safe from deadly microbes and pathogens. 
Instructional Video4:09
TED-Ed

Rosalind Franklin: DNA's Unsung Hero

7th - 12th
She was robbed! Robbed of her photograph. Robbed of recognition. Robbed of a Nobel prize. Meet Rosalind Franklin, "the woman behind the helix," the DNA double helix, that is, and learn the real story behind the discovery of the structure...
Instructional Video4:20
TED-Ed

How Do Contraceptives Work?

7th - 12th
How do contraceptives work? What are the forms of contraceptives? Is one form better than others? How reliable is each type? The three forms of contraception—block, disable, or suppress—are examined in a short video designed for high...
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

Why Should You Listen to Vivaldi's "Four Seasons"?

7th - 12th
While many of your class members may find the opening strands of "The Four Seasons" by Antonio Vivaldi familiar, few may know of the rich history of this program music. Viewers not only listen to portions of the music from each season,...
Instructional Video5:10
TED-Ed

Where Do Superstitions Come From?

3rd - 12th
With a little luck, viewers can enjoy a short video that examines superstitions, their origins, and even some benefits. Knock on wood.
Instructional Video5:12
TED-Ed

Why Do You Need to Get a Flu Shot Every Year?

6th - 12th Standards
Don't let your classes take a shot in the dark! Help them understand different types of vaccinations with an informative video lesson. The narrator explains how the flu virus challenges vaccine creators each year thanks to its...
Instructional Video3:36
TED-Ed

The Exceptional Life of Benjamin Banneker

6th - 12th
Introduce your class to Benjamin Banneker, self-taught mathematician and scientist, with a short video that details some of the many accomplishments of the son of freed slaves and contemporary of Thomas Jefferson.
Instructional Video5:10
TED-Ed

How Do Carbohydrates Impact Your health?

6th - 12th
To carb or not to carb, that is the question. Whether it is better to dine on simple or complex carbs, or none at all, is the focus of this sweet video that examines the relationship between the glycemic index of foods and metabolic...
Instructional Video4:18
TED-Ed

How Statistics Can Be Misleading

7th - 12th
Believe it or not, sometimes statistics can be misleading. Introduce young statisticians to Simpson's paradox, where the same set of data can show opposite trends, depending on lurking variables.
Instructional Video4:29
TED-Ed

How to Use Rhetoric to Get What You Want

11th - 12th
Introduce your orators to the art of persuasion, to ethos, logos, and pathos, with a short video that summarizes the key points in Aristotle's treatise on rhetoric.
Instructional Video6:54
The School of Life

Philosophy - Hegel

9th - Higher Ed Standards
The progress of history can be slow, but according to Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, moving from era to era is necessary to refine civilization. Explore the philosophy of Hegel with an overview of his main beliefs, including the value of...
Instructional Video5:59
TED-Ed

Why Should You Read James Joyce's "Ulysses"?

11th - Higher Ed Standards
What is Bloomsday? Why would thousands travel to Dublin on this day to visit sites depicted in a novel that is ridiculously hard to read? Why even bother with reading such a book? Find out by viewing a short video that suggests the...
Instructional Video6:08
TED-Ed

History vs. Che Guevara

9th - 12th
Viewers decide whether revolutions should be judged by their ideals or their outcomes after watching a thought-provoking video. Focusing on the arguments in a trial of Che Guevara, high schoolers debate the scope of history as it relates...