Instructional Video3:18
PBS

Is Instagram Revolutionizing Photography?

12th - Higher Ed
With its ability to make boring cellphone photos look "vintage" and "artsy", the mobile application Instagram has exploded worldwide. Derided by its detractors as a tool for making bad photos worse, we take an alternate view and argue...
Instructional Video1:48
The Telegraph

The science behind how a digital camera works

Higher Ed
While technology plays an integral part in our daily lives, many of us have little understanding of how the devices we use every day actually work. In the video above we reveal how a digital camera works, creating an image by allowing...
Instructional Video3:00
Curated Video

The Surprisingly Long History of the Selfie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Selfies originated in self-portraits made by artists using mirrors and have evolved into the widespread phenomenon seen today on social media platforms. This video highlights advancements in camera technology, from daguerreotype cameras...
Instructional Video11:57
TED Talks

TED: How your pictures can help reclaim lost history | Chance Coughenour

12th - Higher Ed
Digital archaeologist Chance Coughenour is using pictures -- your pictures -- to reclaim antiquities that have been lost to conflict and disaster. After crowdsourcing photographs of destroyed monuments, museums and artifacts, Coughenour...
Instructional Video9:38
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Energy - Level 3 - Energy and Energy Transfer

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on energy and energy transfer. TERMS Energy - the ability to cause change Object - a material thing that can be seen and touched Transfer - the conversion of one form...
Instructional Video3:56
National Geographic

How 3-D Imaging Helps Archaeologists Preserve the Past | National Geographic

Pre-K - 11th
Archaeologist and National Geographic explorer Luis Jaime Castillo and archaeologist Carlos Wester are determined to protect the cultural heritage at the pyramid complex of Chotuna-Chornancap, which was built by the Sicán, or Lambayeque,...
Instructional Video3:56
National Geographic

How 3-D Imaging Helps Archaeologists Preserve the Past | National Geographic

Pre-K - 11th
Archaeologist and National Geographic explorer Luis Jaime Castillo and archaeologist Carlos Wester are determined to protect the cultural heritage at the pyramid complex of Chotuna-Chornancap, which was built by the Sicán, or Lambayeque,...
Instructional Video7:15
National Geographic

What Makes Gum Chewy? | Ingredients With George Zaidan (Episode 5)

Pre-K - 11th
What makes gum stay chewy for so long? ALL THE THINGS. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe ➡ Get updates and tweet episode ideas @georgezaidan ➡ Watch all episodes of Ingredients here: http://bit.ly/WatchIngredients About...
Instructional Video10:40
EarthEcho International

Into the Dead Zone: Urban Runoff and Sustainable Solutions

9th - 12th
This video explores the issue of dead zones caused by urban pollution and stormwater run-off, focusing on the Anacostia River in Washington DC. It highlights the work of a riverkeeper and a massive engineering project to reduce...
Instructional Video13:33
Curated Video

The AI that creates any picture you want

9th - 11th
How programmers turned the internet into a paintbrush. Subscribe and turn on notifications 🔔 so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO Beginning in January 2021, advances in AI research have produced a plethora of deep-learning...
Instructional Video0:30
The March of Time

1952: CANADA: ALUMINUM INDUSTRY: Alcan (Aluminum Company of Canada) robotic arm lifting large square shaped block, pulling back, placing into shaping machine, top pressing uniform dents. CU Stacked bars on loader, moving back REVEALS stacks of bars.

12th - Higher Ed
MOT 1952: CANADA: ALUMINUM INDUSTRY: Alcan (Aluminum Company of Canada) robotic arm lifting large square shaped block, pulling back, placing into shaping machine, top pressing uniform dents. CU Stacked bars on loader, moving back REVEALS...