Instructional Video6:49
SciShow

The 3 Species That Break Genetics

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have discovered a group of three closely related flowers that seem to break the laws of genetics. These mountain beardtongues are pollinated by either bees or butterflies, but not both, and that's the key to an incredibly...
Instructional Video9:32
PBS

How Pollination Got Going Twice

12th - Higher Ed
The world of the Jurassic was a lot like ours - similar interactions between plants and insects were happening, but the players have changed over time. Because it looks like pollination by insects actually got going twice.
Instructional Video9:54
SciShow

7 Butterflies That Could Beat You in a Fight

12th - Higher Ed
If there's one animal you'd think you can beat in a no-holds-barred cage match, it'd be a butterfly, right? Here are 7+ reasons you'd be wrong.
Instructional Video3:08
MinuteEarth

How Caffeine Accidentally Took Over The World

12th - Higher Ed
Plants don't make caffeine just for us, so what DO they make it for?
News Clip7:15
PBS

Use Of Artificial Intelligence Generates Questions About The Future Of Art

12th - Higher Ed
Artificial intelligence is everywhere and part of our conversations about education, politics and social media. It's also a hot topic in the arts world as programs that generate art using AI are widely available to the public. But what...
Instructional Video2:59
SciShow

Good News: Daffodils Are The Worst

12th - Higher Ed
Daffodils are cheerful symbols of spring… and also cold blooded killers. But it turns out, the poison in these plants may actually be helpful to us humans!
Instructional Video10:27
SciShow

Crabs, Cockroaches, and 3 Other Pollinators That Aren't Bees

12th - Higher Ed
Bees aren’t the only pollinators out there. Some of the other, more surprising pollinators aren't just unconventional, they give us unique examples of how the relationship between pollinators and plants evolved in the first place. Hosted...
Instructional Video11:05
SciShow

7 Science Illustrators You Should Know

12th - Higher Ed
Long before we had cameras scientists still needed visual documentation—enter the science illustrator!
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

Pollinating With Bubbles and Some Other Good News You Might Have Missed

12th - Higher Ed
We've found a microbe that might someday protect us from malaria parasites, and bees might have help with their jobs soon, thanks to bubble pollination!
Instructional Video3:19
SciShow

Why Are These Bees STABBING Plants?

12th - Higher Ed
Humans know a lot about bees, seeing as they impact both our ecology and our economy. But there's something about bumble bees that we totally missed until recently; a super weird and mysterious behavior that might give them a leg up in...
Instructional Video14:16
TED Talks

TED: How to unleash your inner maximalist through costume | Machine Dazzle

12th - Higher Ed
Tapping into the transformational power of costume, concept artist Machine Dazzle takes us on a maximalist journey through art, history and fashion. From a jaw-droppingly intricate '60s bouffant ensemble to a 24-hour show of extravagant...
Instructional Video19:43
SciShow Kids

Valentine's Day at The Fort! | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks are making special valentines for all of their friends! And while they’re working they’re watching older videos to help them remember how they can make the best gifts!
Instructional Video21:21
SciShow Kids

How Do Pollinators Help Plants Grow? | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
Summer is nearly here, and that means Squeaks and Jessi will be spending lots of time playing with dirt in the garden! But it won’t just be those two out there making their garden grow big and beautiful. They’ll be getting help from lots...
News Clip2:46
Curated Video

Monet''s masterpiece reopens Paris museum

Higher Ed
AP Television Paris, 2nd May 2006 1. Various exteriors of the Orangerie Museum (Musee de l''Orangerie) 2. Various of Monet''s water lily murals (Les Nympheas) 3. SOUNDBITE: (French) Philippe Saurin, Curator of the Orangerie Museum: "I...
News Clip2:30
Curated Video

FRANCE: MONTIGNY-LE-BRETONNEUX: FUNERAL OF AVALANCHE VICTIMS

Higher Ed
Natural Sound Mourners gathered on Tuesday for the funeral of nine students and a teacher killed in an alpine avalanche last Friday. Despite freezing winds, 6 - thousand people gathered to say goodbye, including Bernadette Chirac, the...
News Clip2:00
Curated Video

Vigil at house where mother killed her five children

Higher Ed
1. Wide street scene, people gathered at the house on Avenue General Jacques, where a mother killed her five children 2. Wide pan down from house to crowds gathered below 3. Mid of young people with candles 4. Close-up of young boy...
News Clip3:41
Curated Video

Memorial service for victims of floods that killed 1,400

Higher Ed
1. Pan right of destroyed home 2. Medium shot of destroyed home 3. Wide shot of destroyed homes in river bed 4. Resident looking at destruction 5. Destroyed home 6. Pan left mourners at church service 7. Father Hector Martinez...
News Clip2:40
Curated Video

Bosnia - Tensions Continue

Higher Ed
Bosnian Federation authorities on Wednesday (24/5) refused to allow more than 600 Bosnian Serb refugees to visit their former homes and a cemetery in the town of Glamoc, now held by Bosnian Croats. The authorities said there were too...
News Clip3:40
Curated Video

More from Windsor Castle, where the Royal Family are gathered

Higher Ed
1. Wide shot people waiting outside castle, pan to entrance 2. Man and girl arriving for Easter service 3. A vicar arriving for service 4. People arriving for service 5. Various police security check 6. Various of people outside 7....
Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

Why Are There So Many Beetles

12th - Higher Ed
Beetles are the most diverse group of complex organisms on Earth, making up over 20% of all named animal species. One in five species on this planet is...a beetle. How did one group of organisms get THAT massive?
Instructional Video6:59
SciShow Kids

Bugs Aren’t Brainless! | Storytime: Charles Henry Turner

K - 5th
Did you know that bees can remember things? It's true, and it's thanks to Dr. Charles Henry Turner that we know so much about insects!
Instructional Video7:20
TED Talks

TED: Smelfies, and other experiments in synthetic biology | Ani Liu

12th - Higher Ed
What if you could take a smell selfie, a smelfie? What if you had a lipstick that caused plants to grow where you kiss? Ani Liu explores the intersection of technology and sensory perception, and her work is wedged somewhere between...
Instructional Video11:01
Crash Course

Ophelia, Gertrude, and Regicide - Hamlet II: Crash Course Literature 204

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you MORE about Bill Shakespeare's Hamlet. John talks about gender roles in Hamlet, and what kind of power and agency Ophelia and Gertrude had, if they had any at all (spoiler alert: we think they did). You'll...
Instructional Video10:27
SciShow

Crabs, Cockroaches, and 3 Other Pollinators That Aren't Bees

12th - Higher Ed
Bees aren’t the only pollinators out there. Some of the other, more surprising pollinators aren't just unconventional, they give us unique examples of how the relationship between pollinators and plants evolved in the first place.