Instructional Video4:50
1
1
TED-Ed

The Three Different Ways Mammals Give Birth

4th - 12th Standards
All mammals have warm blood, are vertebrates, breathe with their lungs, have hair or fur on their bodies, and produce milk for their young. But not all mammals give birth to their young in the same manner. Watch a video that explains how...
Instructional Video9:12
Bozeman Science

Stickleback Evolution

9th - 12th Standards
About 70 percent of the genes of the stickleback fish are the same as humans. In the video, scholars further explore the stickleback fish and its history, from being removed from Loberg Lake to their change and comeback. Over time, these...
Instructional Video12:57
Bozeman Science

Life Requires Free Energy

9th - 12th Standards
Free energy, get your free energy here! Learners see that all organisms require free energy, which comes from the sun. The lesson explains the first two laws of thermodynamics and then analyzes metabolism, via glycolysis, on a very...
Instructional Video22:44
1
1
PBS

A Farewell to Arms: Shaping Fact for Fiction

7th - 12th Standards
Clips from the documentary Hemingway by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick reveal how Ernest Hemingway incorporated his own war experiences in A Farewell to Arms. Young writers then take an experience from their own lives and craft it...
Instructional Video10:49
1
1
PBS

Exploring Hemingway’s Style

11th - Higher Ed Standards
The man, the myth, and the reality. Three clips from the documentary Hemingway by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick introduce viewers to the unique features of Ernest Hemingway's writing style and the events in Hemingway's life that...
Instructional Video0:44
1
1
PBS

Hemingway and Gender Identity

11th - 12th Standards
After watching a short video clip from the documentary Hemingway by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick, learners read an article by Ursula Le Guin about gender roles and sexuality. Scholars then consider how an author's concept of gender roles is...
Instructional Video5:20
PBS

Why Do Our Brains Love Fake News?

6th - 12th Standards
Fake news is all about the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex versus the orbitofrontal cortex. Huh? Get the facts, the real deal, with a short video that explains clearly and succinctly what's going on in our brains that leads us to listen...
Instructional Video5:48
Learning Games Lab

Cation Exchange

9th - 12th Standards
Understanding soil composition requires an understanding of chemical bonding. An informative video lesson shows learners how the atoms and molecules in the soil form ions that attract and repel other atoms and molecules. The...
Instructional Video4:34
PBS

To Kill a Mockingbird Setting: A Portrait of a Southern Town in the 1930s

7th - 12th Standards
The characters of Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird are formed and informed, in part, by the distinctive historical backdrop of Alabama during the Great Depression. Watch a video that details Lee's experience growing up in...
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow

Why Are the Inner and Outer Planets Different?

9th - Higher Ed Standards
How did the planets form? An interesting video from the SciShow Space series identifies the differences between the inner and outer planets and how the history of the solar system's sun put everything in its place. Viewers also learn...
Instructional Video5:23
SciShow

3 Unsolved Moon Mysteries

9th - Higher Ed Standards
What do people really know about the moon? Learn about three unsolved moon mysteries: the moon's past magnetic field, lunar sunrises, and what's really inside the moon's craters. An engaging video from the SciShow Space series connects...
Instructional Video3:48
SciShow

Why We Send Animals to Space

9th - Higher Ed Standards
What were the first living things to travel to space? Long before humans went into orbit, scientists sent animals into space to see how space exploration would affect living things. Viewers of an interesting video learn about how animals...
Instructional Video3:02
PBS

Perpetual Ocean

9th - 12th Standards
Salty sailors in days gone by used to speak of the seven seas. What they didn't know was that their world was one big ocean! Seaworthy scholars climb aboard an adventure that features the major ocean currents during a lesson from PBS's...
Instructional Video4:35
PBS

The Ocean: A Driving Force for Weather and Climate

9th - 12th Standards
What's behind Earth's wild, wonderful, and sometimes weird weather? A lesson from PBS's Weather and Climate series takes viewers on a worldwide trek to examine the many interactions between Earth's atmosphere, oceans, and land masses....
Instructional Video1:16
PBS

Global Ocean Currents

9th - 12th Standards
What forces drive the ocean's currents? Science scholars observe global ocean currents at different depths to explore their characteristics and patterns. Part of PBS's Weather and Climate series, the resource includes teaching...
Instructional Video4:19
2
2
PBS

Atmospheric CO2 and Earth’s Temperature

9th - 12th Standards
Is atmospheric carbon dioxide really to blame for global warming? Young environmentalists analyze historical carbon dioxide and temperature data during a multimedia activity from PBS's Weather and Climate series. High schoolers read...
Instructional Video9:01
SciShow

7 New Species Discovered in Cities

9th - 12th Standards
Scientists discover more than 15,000 new species each year. Viewers learn about seven new species discovered in cities, often right next to where people live. As part of a larger playlist, a video discusses the techniques researchers use...
Instructional Video8:20
Corbett Maths

Area of a Sector

9th - 11th Standards
It's the skill where fractions and circles must work together. A thorough lesson models the process of finding the area of a sector using a radius and angle. The narrator extends instruction to include finding a radius of a circle from a...
Instructional Video3:10
Macat

An Introduction to W. Kim Chan and Renee Mauborgne’s Blue Ocean Strategy

9th - 12th Standards
When businesses compete against one another in the same market, it becomes difficult to turn a profit. A playlist on the world's greatest ideas includes a video summary of the Blue Ocean Strategy by W. Kim Chan and Renee Mauborgne, which...
Instructional Video
Macat

An Introduction to Alan Baddeley's Working Memory

9th - 12th Standards
The brain is an amazing and complex organ. A video summary of Alan Baddley's Working Memory provides an in-depth look at the brain, particularly how short-term memory works. Visual elements and clear narration help make the text more...
Instructional Video
Macat

An Introduction to Richard Dawkins’ The Selfish Gene

9th - 12th Standards
Are people inherently selfish? A video summary of Richard Dawkins' The Selfish Gene discusses how biology plays a role in selfishness. Part of a larger playlist the summary incorporates graphics and relevant examples to help make the...
Instructional Video7:45
TED-Ed

How Far Can We Go? Limits of Humanity.

9th - 12th Standards
Imagine living in a neighborhood where the houses on your street keep moving farther away until your house is the only one in the reachable vicinity. That's what is happening in our universe, except your house is our galaxy, and the...
Instructional Video3:39
TED-Ed

What Is the Internet of Things?

6th - 12th Standards
High schoolers today take it for granted that their computers, cell phones, cars, game systems, and other electronics send them alerts and talk to each other. Teach them more about the Internet of Things with an explanatory video that...
Instructional Video4:58
TED-Ed

What Is the Tragedy of the Commons?

6th - 12th Standards
What's good for all of us is good for each of us. The Tragedy of the Commons refers to a situation in which one person's decision to act in his or her own best interest negatively affects the rest of the population—and ultimately, him or...