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Instructional Video2:27
Science360

RoboBees: Design Poses Intriguing Engineering, Computer Science Challenges

12th - Higher Ed
It started with a TV show, ""Silence of the Bees,"" about honeybee populations in steep decline. At Harvard University, electrical engineers Rob Wood and Gu-Yeon Wei, and computer scientist Radhika Nagpal saw a challenge. And, so began...
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Instructional Video0:59
Life Noggin

Why Are We Giving Rats Birth Control? #dearblocko #shorts

3rd - 9th
Yeah. You read that right. This is definitely one of the more unique Dear Blocko questions I've ever received! Watch more: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d7eL9ZNvZas Support the great work being done by Lifespan, the team powering Life...
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Instructional Video14:41
Curated Video

Why NASA quarantined the Apollo 11 astronauts

9th - 11th
On July 21, 1969, the Apollo 11 quarantine began. Support Vox by joining the Video Lab at http://vox.com/join or making a one-time contribution here: http://vox.com/contribute In this episode of History Club, Vox's Phil Edwards and...
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Instructional Video2:16
Harvard University

Barefoot walking

6th - 11th
A team of researchers, led by Human Evolutionary Biology Professor Dan Lieberman, studied callouses on two Kenyan populations as a marvel of natural selection’s ability to engineer.
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Instructional Video1:02:35
Gresham College

Transplantation and the Eye - Professor William Ayliffe

10th - Higher Ed
The first successful solid organ transplant was the cornea in Moravia in 1905. However both science and clinical tools then available were unable to allow further advances. The discovery of the natural barriers to transplantation enabled...
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Instructional Video59:44
Gresham College

The Ageing Eye - Professor William Ayliffe

10th - Higher Ed
As the eye ages, profound structural changes occur, leading to visual impairment and even blindness. Exciting discoveries in biological science and surgery are opening up possible new treatments for these common conditions. The economic...
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Instructional Video3:32
AsapSCIENCE

Your Brain on LSD and Acid

6th - 11th
What happens to your brain and body when you drop acid? Subscribe for weekly videos: http://bit.ly/asapsci GET THE ASAPSCIENCE BOOK: http://asapscience.com/book/ Created by: Mitchell Moffit and Gregory Brown Written by: Rachel Salt,...
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Instructional Video4:24
Curated Video

Cutting-edge: the science of tooth replacement at the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition 2014

9th - 11th
Cutting-edge: the science of tooth replacement exhibit at the Royal Society Summer Science Exhibition 2014. Professor Paul Sharpe, Head of Division,King's College London Dental Institute. Dr Abigail Tucker, King's College London Dental...
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Instructional Video11:03
Curated Video

Medicating the environment

9th - 11th
Expanding and aging human populations require ever increasing amounts of pharmaceuticals to maintain health. Recent studies have revealed that pharmaceuticals, both human and veterinary, disperse widely in aquatic and terrestrial...
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Instructional Video10:12
Curated Video

The culture of tool use in primates

9th - 11th
In wild primates, the presence of culture has been inferred by showing that simple ecological and genetic differences cannot account for all behavioural variation across populations (e.g. tool use). However, this method ignores the...
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Instructional Video41:01
Curated Video

The Francis Crick Lecture - Parkinson's Disease

9th - 11th
Francis Crick Lecture 2018 delivered by Dr Miratul Muqit: Parkinson’s disease: decoding the mysteries of neurodegeneration Parkinson’s disease has emerged as a leading cause of brain degeneration in aged populations across the world....
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Instructional Video14:05
Curated Video

The Francis Crick Lecture - Parkinson's Disease Q&A

9th - 11th
Francis Crick Lecture 2018 delivered by Dr Miratul Muqit: Parkinson’s disease: decoding the mysteries of neurodegeneration Parkinson’s disease has emerged as a leading cause of brain degeneration in aged populations across the world....
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Instructional Video0:42
Science360

How can a change to one species trigger a chain reaction that affects many more?

12th - Higher Ed
Can a change in the population levels for one species have a cascading effect on others? And how could that change an entire ecosystem? Sean B. Carroll, vice president for science education at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and...
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Instructional Video2:03
Science360

Through the years, NSF's McMurdo Station, Antarctica

12th - Higher Ed
The U.S. Antarctic Program, managed by the National Science Foundation, maintains three year-round stations in Antarctica, including McMurdo Station, established in 1956 by the U.S. Navy and an operational hub and logistics center for...
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Instructional Video2:33
Science360

Citizen Science - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
With help from the National Science Foundation, Cornell University's Ornithology Lab is tracking bird breeding biology and the impact of climate change on bird populations. Some of the best information they are getting is from dedicated...
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Instructional Video2:20
Science360

RoboBees Design Poses Intriguing Engineering, Computer Science Challenges

12th - Higher Ed
It started with a TV show, ""Silence of the Bees,"" about honeybee populations in steep decline. At Harvard University, electrical engineers Rob Wood and Gu-Yeon Wei, and computer scientist Radhika Nagpal saw a challenge. And, so began...
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Instructional Video2:33
Science360

Birds, Climate Change, and Citizen Science

12th - Higher Ed
With help from the National Science Foundation, Cornell University's Ornithology Lab is tracking bird breeding biology and the impact of climate change on bird populations. Some of the best information they are getting is from dedicated...
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Instructional Video3:05
Science360

Even healthy corals have viruses

12th - Higher Ed
Corals are important ecosystem engineers, providing habitat and nutrient recycling to tropical reefs. However, coral species' richness and abundance are in decline worldwide, due in large part to the impacts from global industrialization...
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Instructional Video13:00
Bozeman Science

Speciation and Extinction

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen details the evolutionary processes of speciation and extinction. Stickleback evolution in Lake Loberg is used as example of rapid speciation. Adaptive radiation is illustrated using the Hawaiian honeycreeper. A brief...
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Instructional Video4:52
SciShow

The Science of Men

12th - Higher Ed
Learn about the history of dudes, and a new theory about deep voices in this new episode of SciShow News. You know, science... bro... stuff.
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Instructional Video4:15
Curated Video

How Many Trees Are There?

12th - Higher Ed
It may be an impossible questions, but we can at least get close.
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Instructional Video11:06
SciShow

Goodall, Fossey & Galdikas: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Today we know that humans and chimpanzees share 99% of their DNA and that we have a lot in common. Not just how we look, but how we behave, form groups, defend our turf, and love each other. People didn't always see other primates this...
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Instructional Video16:43
TED Talks

Simon Berrow: How do you save a shark you know nothing about?

12th - Higher Ed
They're the second-largest fish in the world, they're almost extinct, and we know almost nothing about them. In this talk, Simon Berrow describes the fascinating basking shark ("great fish of the sun" in Irish), and the exceptional --...
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Instructional Video33:36
SciShow

Hare Hair & Fuzzy Bunnies | SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Dr. Scott Mills joins Hank to talk about studying color changing fur and evolutionary conservation. Scott and graduate student Lindsey Barnard bring a snowshoe hare and Jessi from Animal Wonders brings two Netherland Dwarf rabbits.

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