Instructional Video2:17
All In One Social Media

Winter Olympic Games 2018 - Hockey, Team USA, Dancing and Korea - Vlog 11

Higher Ed
Winter Olympic Games 2018 - Hockey, Team USA, Dancing and Korea // We finally made it to the PyeongChang 2018 Olympic Winter Games to watch Team USA in the hockey! It's always great to have some time away and even better when we get to...
Instructional Video4:09
Wonderscape

History of the Winter Olympics

K - 5th
History of the Winter Olympics The Olympics From Antiquity to Paris 2024 part 4
Instructional Video3:00
Curated Video

The Origins and Traditions of the Olympic Games

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A brief overview of the origins and traditions of the Olympic Games, from its roots in ancient Greek mythology to its revival in the modern era. Explore the significance of key elements such as the Olympic flag representing the five...
Instructional Video2:37
NASA

NASA Studies Snow At The Winter Olympics

3rd - 11th
NASA engineer Manuel Vega can see one of the Olympic ski jump towers from the rooftop of the South Korean weather office where he is stationed. Vega is not watching skiers take flight, preparing for the 2018 PyeongChang Winter Olympics...
Instructional Video10:23
Curated Video

Olympic Games History for Kids | Bedtime History

K - 5th
Discover the thrilling saga of the Olympic Games from its ancient beginnings in Olympia, Greece, over 3,000 years ago, to the modern international spectacle we know today. This video takes you on a journey through time, exploring how the...
Instructional Video2:56
The Economist

What you need to know about the Winter Olympics

12th - Higher Ed
The Winter Olympics officially starts today in Pyeongchang, South Korea. This Games is the most important ever–here’s why.
Podcast4:50
Bedtime History

The Olympic Games

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The first Olympic games were held in Greece over 2,500 years ago. They were part of a festival honoring the Greek god Zeus and featured just one event, a 600-foot race. The Olympics have changed greatly since that first event. Today’s...
Instructional Video1:53
Curated Video

How to Celebrate the History of the Winter Olympics

9th - Higher Ed
The Winter Olympics offer plenty of opportunities for celebration. Here are a few of the more unusual ways to celebrate.
Instructional Video5:48
Clarendon Learning

Overview of the Olympics for Kids | Learn all about the history of the olympic games

K - 6th
In our overview of the Olympics for Kids video you will learn all about the history of the olympic games and their importance back then and even today. We learn about the symbols of the olympics, when they started, olympic events, the...
Instructional Video5:21
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympic Games - Science of Ice

12th - Higher Ed
The science that makes ice slippery also makes the Olympic Winter Games possible. But exactly what makes ice slippery? Ken Golden, a mathematician at the University of Utah, explains how the unique surface of ice makes the slide and...
Instructional Video4:18
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - Slapshot (Hockey)

12th - Higher Ed
One of the most popular team sports in the Winter Olympics is hockey. More than just a physical game, for scientists, it's a showcase for physics on ice--especially when it comes to the slapshot. Three-time Olympian Julie Chu, Thomas...
Instructional Video5:22
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympic Games - Engineering the Half Pipe

12th - Higher Ed
Mechanical engineer Brianno Coller, a professor at Northern Illinois University, explains how engineers design the half pipe so that snowboarder Shaun White can get more air time and allow him to perform tricks. Provided by the National...
Instructional Video4:40
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympic Games - Science of Snow

12th - Higher Ed
Snow is an essential part of the 2014 Olympics. How it's formed and how it reacts has been studied by scientists for centuries and continues to this day. Sarah Konrad, a former Winter Olympian who is also a glaciologist at the University...
Instructional Video5:50
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympic Games - Engineering Competition Suits

12th - Higher Ed
At the 2014 Olympics, long track speed skater Shani Davis will be wearing what may be one of the most advanced competition suits ever engineered. Under Armour Innovation lab's Kevin Haley and polymer scientist and engineer Sarah Morgan,...
Instructional Video4:58
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympic Games - Physics of Slope-Style Skiing

12th - Higher Ed
Slope-style skiing is a gravity defying freestyle skiing event debuting in Sochi. Nick Goepper, a 2013 world champion, will need to follow the laws of physics and rotational motion in order to nail his tricks in his quest for Olympic...
Instructional Video4:59
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - Curling

12th - Higher Ed
Curling has been in the Winter Olympics for four years now, but it still seems a little strange to most of us. John Shuster, the captain--or "skip"--of the U.S. Curling Team in Vancouver, explains this unusual sport, and NSF-funded...
Instructional Video2:25
The Guardian

Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics construction covers nearby village in dust

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Sochi 2014 Winter Olympics construction covers nearby village in dust Subscribe to the Guardian HERE: http://bitly.com/UvkFpD Construction for the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics engulfs the village of Akhshtyr in dust and debris. Local...
Instructional Video5:07
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympic Games - Olympic Movement and Robotic Design

12th - Higher Ed
Professor Raffaello D'Andrea at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, Switzerland, describes how control systems engineering is laying the groundwork for the design of more "athletic" robots. Provided by the National...
Instructional Video5:05
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - Bobsledding

12th - Higher Ed
The winter games in Vancouver provide a chance for the United States' four-man bobsled team to win its first gold medal in more than 60 years. And with the help of Paul Doherty, senior scientist at the Exploratorium in San Francisco,...
Instructional Video5:37
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics Figure Skating

12th - Higher Ed
Every four years, we watch the stakes for Olympic figure skaters get higher, as they try to increase rotation in the air with their triple axels and quadruple toe loops. How do they do that? It's a scientific principle that we asked...
Instructional Video5:06
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - Cross-Country Skiing, Internal Athlete

12th - Higher Ed
The United States hasn't won an Olympic medal in cross-country skiing since 1976, but in 2010, several skiers hope to change that. If they're successful, you can be certain it's due to their incredible endurance--cross-country skiers are...
Instructional Video5:40
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - Motion

12th - Higher Ed
The Olympics are a unique chance to marvel at the physical abilities of these world-class athletes. But what makes them unique? After all, they're made of the same flesh and blood as the rest of us--how did they become Olympians? Dan...
Instructional Video4:18
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - Short Track Speed Skating

12th - Higher Ed
The U.S. speed skating team has two best hopes against a powerful South Korean team that took three- of-a-possible-four golds in Torino: Apolo Ohno and J.R. Celski--an 18-year-old World Champion in his first Olympics. Speed skating is...
Instructional Video1:18
Curated Video

How to Follow the Winter Olympics

9th - Higher Ed
Howcast -If your Olympic dreams begin and end in front of the TV, these tips will show how to catch all the action without missing a single gold medal moment.

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