Instructional Video18:10
Coach Dan Blewett

Dan Blewett Speaking - Difficulty of Athletes Transitioning into the Real World

K - 5th
The transition from athletes into the real world is difficult. What strategies can they employ? What will they face?
Instructional Video2:12
Mazz Media

Lab Safety: Making Careful Observations

6th - 8th
In this live-action program viewers will learn that being able to make careful and accurate observations is the foundation of any lab based science class, such as chemistry, biology, or physics. Students will come to understand the...
Instructional Video4:48
Mazz Media

Making Careful Observations (Recording and Analyzing)

6th - 8th
In this live-action program viewers will learn that being able to make careful and accurate observations is the foundation of any lab based science class, such as chemistry, biology, or physics. Students will come to understand the...
Instructional Video14:47
TED Talks

Sara-Jane Dunn: The next software revolution: programming biological cells

12th - Higher Ed
The cells in your body are like computer software: they're "programmed" to carry out specific functions at specific times. If we can better understand this process, we could unlock the ability to reprogram cells ourselves, says...
Instructional Video5:31
SciShow Kids

Meet the Redwoods: The World’s Tallest Trees

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks are thinking of visiting the redwoods, the tallest trees in the world, but there's lots for them to learn before they make their trip! First Grade Next Generation Science Standards Disciplinary Core Idea: LS1.A:...
Instructional Video1:00
Visual Learning Systems

Investigating Plant Structure and Function: Introduction

9th - 12th
Plants possess a wide variety of structures that enable them to accomplish amazing things. This engaging series of videos investigates structures common to most plants and describes how these features enable them to survive. Familiar,...
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.
Instructional Video3:03
FuseSchool

BIOLOGY - Evolution -Competition & Natural Selection

6th - Higher Ed
In nature, all organisms compete with each other for resources in order to survive. Competition between members of the same species is what makes organisms evolve. This theory of competition and ‘survival of the fittest’ is called...
Instructional Video1:52
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Allison Kaufman - Teachers Make a Difference

Higher Ed
Allison B. Kaufman, PhD is a research scientist with the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Connecticut, where she also teaches as a adjunct professor in the departments of Marine Biology and Psychology....
Instructional Video3:21
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Pam Moran - Teachers Make a Difference

Higher Ed
Dr. Pamela Moran has served as the Superintendent of Albemarle County Public Schools since January 2006. She oversees a division with an annual operating budget of $160 million, with more than 1,200 teachers educating over 13,600...
Instructional Video10:04
Journey to the Microcosmos

Making Decisions Without a Brain

9th - Higher Ed
Making decisions can be pretty hard, but imagining trying to do it without a brain!
Instructional Video2:17
Curated Video

Introduction to the Structure and Investigation of the Brain

Higher Ed
The video is a brief introduction to the structure and functions of the brain, as well as the methods used to investigate and understand it. The narrator explains the different regions of the brain and their associated functions, how the...
Instructional Video3:15
Curated Video

How DNA Can Be Extracted From Fruit | Genetics | Biology | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
How DNA Can Be Extracted From Fruit | Genetics | Biology | FuseSchool Did you know that you share 50% of your DNA with a banana? You might be more closely related than you thought! This is because all living cells contain genetic...
Instructional Video3:17
Curated Video

Competition and Natural Selection | Evolution | Biology | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
In nature, all organisms compete with each other for resources in order to survive. Competition between members of the same species is what makes organisms evolve. This theory of competition and ‘survival of the fittest’ is called...
Instructional Video3:41
Curated Video

Variation | Genetics | Biology | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
Variation | Genetics | Biology | FuseSchool Look at these baby animals. You will have immediately observed how cute and fluffy they are but you will also have noticed that they are different - they vary. Yes - some are puppies and some...
Instructional Video3:06
Curated Video

Evolution by Natural Selection - Darwin's Finches | Evolution | Biology | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
Evolution by Natural Selection - Darwin's Finches | Evolution | Biology | FuseSchool The study of finches led to the development of one of the most important scientific theories of all time. In December 1831 a naturalist called Charles...
Instructional Video2:47
Curated Video

What Are Chromosomes | Genetics | Biology | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
In the nucleus of each eukaryotic cell, the DNA is packaged together into chromosomes. Each chromosome is made up of DNA that is tightly coiled around proteins that give it the structure. Chromosomes usually occur in pairs, except for...
Instructional Video3:14
Curated Video

Plant Classification | Evolution | Biology | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
Plants are extremely complex and diverse - there are thousands of species. In fact, there are probably somewhere around half a million different species. And these are just the ones we know about - there are no doubt many more that...
Instructional Video3:18
Curated Video

Charles Darwin's Observations | Evolution | Biology | FuseSchool

12th - Higher Ed
Charles Darwin was a keen naturalist and geologist who made detailed observations about the natural world. Whilst studying at Cambridge, Darwin learnt many important scientific skills including species identification, how to catalogue...
Instructional Video53:53
The Royal Institution

What Makes Us Human? - with Adam Rutherford

9th - 11th
We like to think of ourselves as exceptional beings, but are we really any more special than other animals? Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe Humans are the slightest of twigs on a single family tree that...
Instructional Video2:44
Science360

SOCCER, PAC MAN AND EUGLENA: COMBINING FUN, HANDS-ON BIOLOGY WITH THE CONVENIENCE OF A SMARTPHONE

12th - Higher Ed
In episode 71, Charlie and Jordan discuss a 3-D printed, easily assembled smartphone microscope--called the LudusScope--that provides new ways of interacting with and learning about common microbes. Developed at Stanford University, the...
Instructional Video3:51
SciShow

Why Do People Kill? And Other Revelations Of Human Nature

12th - Higher Ed
There are a lot of things that are still not fully understood about the species Homo sapiens - what makes us US? What makes us move the way we do, think the way we do, and kill the way we do? Today on SciShow News, Hank gives us a little...
Instructional Video4:34
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why are we so attached to our things? - Christian Jarrett

Pre-K - Higher Ed
After witnessing the _violent rage" shown by babies whenever deprived of an item they considered their own, Jean Piaget _ a founding father of child psychology _ observed something profound about human nature: Our sense of ownership...
Instructional Video3:27
SciShow

Why Do People Kill? And Other Revelations Of Human Nature

12th - Higher Ed
There are a lot of things that are still not fully understood about the species Homo sapiens - what makes us US? What makes us move the way we do, think the way we do, and kill the way we do? Today on SciShow News, Hank gives us a little...