Instructional Video5:03
TED-Ed

These salamanders snack on each other (but don't die) | Luis Zambrano

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Axolotls are one of science's most studied animals. Why, you ask? These extraordinary salamanders are masters of regeneration: they can flawlessly regenerate body parts ranging from amputated limbs and crushed spines to parts of their...
Instructional Video11:43
Weird History

Why Elizabeth I Was A Badass Queen

12th - Higher Ed
Queen Elizabeth the first may have been a virgin who can’t drive but what most people don’t know is that she was one of the most brutally cut-throat and significant rulers England has ever had. A badass to some, a merciless imperialist...
Instructional Video5:57
TED Talks

TED: An ever-evolving map of everything on Earth | Jack Dangermond

12th - Higher Ed
What if we had a map of ... everything? Jack Dangermond, a visionary behind the geographic information system (GIS) technology used to map and analyze all kinds of complex data, walks us through the interconnected technologies gathering...
Instructional Video7:21
Science Buddies

Create an Urban Heat Island Profile Using ArcGIS Online

K - 5th
In this science project, you will explore Urban Heat Islands with ArcGIS Online and analyze surface type & air temperature relationships in your city.
Instructional Video15:10
Curated Video

How Stalin starved Ukraine

9th - 11th
It was a genocide that Russia continues to cover up to this day Subscribe and turn on notifications 🔔 so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO In Ukraine, it’s become known as “the Holodomor,” meaning “death by starvation.” It...