Instructional Video6:12
Amoeba Sisters

Monohybrids and the Punnett Square Guinea Pigs

12th - Higher Ed
Learn how to use a Punnett square to solve a Mendelian monohybrid cross with one of the Amoeba Sister's favorite classroom pets: hairless guinea pigs.
Instructional Video3:06
SciShow

Using Genetics (and Sugar) to Control Malaria

12th - Higher Ed
Mosquitos might not be everyone’s favorite bug, but there’s a way we might at least be able to more comfortably coexist with these agitating arthropods.
Instructional Video3:13
SciShow

Elizabeth Blackburn: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Hank brings us the story of Elizabeth Blackburn, the Nobel Prize-winning Australian woman who discovered telomeres and telomerase, and helped scientists begin to understand the process of aging at a genetic level.
Instructional Video9:20
SciShow

Taboos of Science

12th - Higher Ed
Hank discusses some of the taboos which have plagued scientific inquiry in the past and a few that still exist today.
Instructional Video9:37
TED Talks

TED: How we'll fight the next deadly virus | Pardis Sabeti

12th - Higher Ed
When ebola broke out in March 2014, Pardis Sabeti and her team got to work sequencing the virus's genome, learning how it mutated and spread. Sabeti immediately released her research online, so virus trackers and scientists from around...
Instructional Video3:17
SciShow

The Sex Lives of Early Humans

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks about ancient sexy times, and how we know that early humans were getting it on with all kinds of folks.
Instructional Video8:12
Amoeba Sisters

Dihybrid and Two-Trait Crosses

12th - Higher Ed
This video will show how to set up and solve everyone's favorite 16 square Punnett square.
Instructional Video5:50
SciShow

Genomics Has a Diversity Problem

12th - Higher Ed
Someday, the information in our genome could transform healthcare as we know it, but one major hurdle we have to get over is the lack of diversity in our studies.
Instructional Video2:10
TED Talks

Nellie McKay: "Clonie"

12th - Higher Ed
Singer-songwriter Nellie McKay performs the semi-serious song "Clonie" -- about creating the ultimate companion.
Instructional Video5:21
SciShow

The Girl Who Never Grew Up

12th - Higher Ed
The human body generally grows in a predictable pattern, but in one rare case, one American girl essentially remained a toddler her entire life.
Instructional Video9:08
TED Talks

Drew Berry: Animations of unseeable biology

12th - Higher Ed
We have no ways to directly observe molecules and what they do -- but Drew Berry wants to change that. He demos his scientifically accurate (and entertaining!) animations that help researchers see unseeable processes within our own cells.
Instructional Video2:34
SciShow

Barbara McClintock: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us about another great mind in science - Barbara McClintock won the Nobel Prize in Physiology for her discovery of mobile genetic elements and remains the only woman to receive an unshared prize in that category.
Instructional Video3:08
SciShow

How to Make A Humanzee

12th - Higher Ed
We all know about inter species animal hybrids - Napoleon Dynamite's favorite animal, the liger, is a typical example. But could a human and our closest primate relative the chimpanzee also breed a living hybrid? Hank explores this ......
Instructional Video3:10
SciShow

3 Sad Surprises: The Human Genome Project

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us three surprises about human DNA which we learned because of the Human Genome Project.
Instructional Video16:12
TED Talks

David R. Liu: Can we cure genetic diseases by rewriting DNA?

12th - Higher Ed
In a story of scientific discovery, chemical biologist David R. Liu shares a breakthrough: his lab's development of base editors that can rewrite DNA. This crucial step in genome editing takes the promise of CRISPR to the next level: if...
Instructional Video11:14
SciShow

Why Y Chromosomes Won’t Be Around Forever

12th - Higher Ed
We're generally taught that chromosomes determine an animal's sex, but it is way more nuanced than that.
Instructional Video7:35
SciShow

Venomous Mammals, Sensory Receptors & the Moon's True Origin Story

12th - Higher Ed
Hank describes to us some news stories that illustrate how science is continually changing the things we think we "know" - from the status of various animals species, to the way our senses work and even where the Moon came from -...
Instructional Video10:03
SciShow

Here's What DNA Really Looks Like

12th - Higher Ed
There’s more to DNA than just the double helix we know and love: under some conditions this familiar molecule can take on unfamiliar forms, each of which can have a different impact on our health.
Instructional Video10:26
Crash Course

Why Human Ancestry Matters: Crash Course Big History 205

12th - Higher Ed
This week, Emily Graslie is teaching you about human ancestry and geneaology, how we got to be the species we are, and why that matters in our zoomed out look at Big History.
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

How Neanderthals Ended Up With Human Chromosomes

12th - Higher Ed
This week we learned that the Neanderthal/Denisovan/Human family tree is pretty complicated, thanks to a close look into some Neanderthals' Y chromosomes.
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

Could Your Blood Type Ever Change?

12th - Higher Ed
From A positive to O negative, everyone's born with a blood type, and they're stuck with that blood type for their whole lives... or are they?
Instructional Video21:18
TED Talks

Barry Schuler: Genomics 101

12th - Higher Ed
What is genomics? How will it affect our lives? In this intriguing primer on the genomics revolution, entrepreneur Barry Schuler says we can at least expect healthier, tastier food. He suggests we start with the pinot noir grape, to...
Instructional Video6:49
TED Talks

TED: Why genetic research must be more diverse | Keolu Fox

12th - Higher Ed
Ninety-six percent of genome studies are based on people of european descent. The rest of the world is virtually unrepresented -- and this is dangerous, says geneticist and TED Fellow Keolu Fox, because we react to drugs differently...
Instructional Video14:55
TED Talks

TED: How digital DNA could help you make better health choices | Jun Wang

12th - Higher Ed
What if you could know exactly how food or medication would impact your health -- before you put it in your body? Genomics researcher Jun Wang is working to develop digital doppelgangers for real people; they start with genetic code, but...