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Instructional Video11:37
Curated Video

Biomedicine: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
The history of science up until the Cold War is often overshadowed by the Manhattan Project. But, today we are going to talk about advances in biomedicine, or healthcare based on a biological understanding of human bodies and diseases.
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Instructional Video3:24
Curated Video

Good Vaccinations SONG | Horrid Health | Horrible Histories

K - 9th
Follow the story of Jenner's vaccination through to the discovery of penicillin and how these three men saved more lives than anyone else. Subscribe for more Horrible History: http://bit.ly/HorribleHistoriesSubscribe Visit our website:...
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Instructional Video5:08
TED-Ed

Ugly History: The US syphilis experiment | Susan M. Reverby

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Afflicting nearly 1 in 10 Americans, syphilis was ravaging the U.S. in the 1930s. Many doctors believed syphilis affected Black and white patients differently, and the Public Health Service launched an experiment to investigate,...
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Instructional Video9:33
TED Talks

Fiorenzo Omenetto: Silk, the ancient material of the future

12th - Higher Ed
Fiorenzo Omenetto shares 20+ astonishing new uses for silk, one of nature's most elegant materials -- in transmitting light, improving sustainability, adding strength and making medical leaps and bounds. On stage, he shows a few...
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Instructional Video9:59
SciShow

10 Things We Didn't Know 100 Years Ago

12th - Higher Ed
In just the last century, we've made an astounding amount of scientific progress. And thanks to some of that progress, we can now share 10 of those discoveries with you in a video on the internet! Hosted by: Michael Aranda ----------...
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Instructional Video4:28
Step Back History

Did Medieval Anglo-Saxons Cure MRSA?

12th - Higher Ed
The world is at the verge of a crisis, where the antibiotics we used to treat infections for decades are becoming useless. It takes a historian and a microbiologist to possibly save the day.
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Instructional Video16:02
TED Talks

Edward Tenner: Unintended consequences

12th - Higher Ed
Every new invention changes the world -- in ways both intentional and unexpected. Historian Edward Tenner tells stories that illustrate the under-appreciated gap between our ability to innovate and our ability to foresee the consequences.
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Instructional Video2:24
MinuteEarth

Where Do Our Drugs Come From?

12th - Higher Ed
The incredible chemical weapon-making abilities of fungi, bacteria, and plants have created a diverse array of compounds that are useful to humans.
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Instructional Video9:07
Curated Video

How We Discovered Germs

12th - Higher Ed
Humanity didn't always know about the invisible viruses, bacteria, and microbes that can cause disease. But that doesn't mean we didn't come up with some truly bizarre ideas. From the four humors and miasma theory to bloodletting and...
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Instructional Video12:37
Crash Course

Biomedicine: Crash Course History of Science #34

9th - 12th Standards
Track biomedicine advances from the early 1800s to today! Young scholars learn about groundbreaking discoveries in medicine throughout history in the 34th installment of a larger Crash Course History of Science series. The lesson...
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Instructional Video9:44
The Great War

Medical Treatment in World War 1

9th - Higher Ed Standards
A world war costing millions of lives actually also saved millions of humans at the same time. Scholars investigate the advancements of medicine in the 25th lesson of a 32-part series on the Great War. A short video clip results in open...
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Instructional Video7:24
Be Smart

Rise of the Superbugs

6th - 12th Standards
The narrator of a short video shows learners the history of antibiotics with the use of penicillin. Viewers then see how bacteria are becoming resistant to antibiotics and what that means for our future health and for the development of...