Instructional Video15:44
TED Talks

TED: Say your truths and seek them in others | elizabeth Lesser

12th - Higher Ed
In a lyrical, unexpectedly funny talk about heavy topics such as frayed relationships and the death of a loved one, elizabeth Lesser describes the healing process of putting aside pride and defensiveness to make way for soul-baring and...
Instructional Video17:57
TED Talks

Ed Ulbrich: How Benjamin Button got his face

12th - Higher Ed
Ed Ulbrich, the digital-effects guru from Digital Domain, explains the Oscar-winning technology that allowed his team to digitally create the older versions of Brad Pitt's face for "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button."
Instructional Video8:49
TED Talks

TED: What happens when a city runs out of room for its dead | Alison Killing

12th - Higher Ed
If you want to go out and start your own cemetery in the uK, says Alison Killing, "you kind of can." She thinks a lot about where we die and are buried -- and in this talk, the architect and TED Fellow offers an eye-opening economic and...
Instructional Video6:08
TED Talks

TED: What I learned from 2,000 obituaries | Lux Narayan

12th - Higher Ed
Lux Narayan starts his day with scrambled eggs and the question: "Who died today?" Why? By analyzing 2,000 New York Times obituaries over a 20-month period, Narayan gleaned, in just a few words, what achievement looks like over a...
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 Video13:08
TED Talks

TED: How loss helped one artist find beauty in imperfection | Alyssa Monks

12th - Higher Ed
Painter Alyssa Monks finds beauty and inspiration in the unknown, the unpredictable and even the awful. In a poetic, intimate talk, she describes the interaction of life, paint and canvas through her development as an artist, and as a...
Instructional Video15:53
TED Talks

Siddharthan Chandran: Can the damaged brain repair itself?

12th - Higher Ed
After a traumatic brain injury, it sometimes happens that the brain can repair itself, building new brain cells to replace damaged ones. But the repair doesn't happen quickly enough to allow recovery from degenerative conditions like...
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 Video5:08
SciShow

Why Echidnas Are Evolutionary Misfits

12th - Higher Ed
It’s pretty well known that Australia is home to some strange animals, but echidnas are especially weird evolutionary misfits.
Instructional Video3:50
SciShow

The Disappearing Monarch and the Oldest Mammal on Earth

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News starts the new year off with unusual animal news, including a crisis for the iconic monarch butterfly, and new research into what makes bowhead whales the longest-living mammals on Earth.
Instructional Video12:22
TED Talks

TED: What baby boomers can learn from millennials at work -- and vice versa | Chip Conley

12th - Higher Ed
For the first time ever, we have five generations in the workplace at the same time, says entrepreneur Chip Conley. What would happen if we got intentional about how we all work together? In this accessible talk, Conley shows how age...
Instructional Video11:38
TED Talks

TED: Let's end ageism | Ashton Applewhite

12th - Higher Ed
It's not the passage of time that makes it so hard to get older. It's ageism, a prejudice that pits us against our future selves -- and each other. Ashton Applewhite urges us to dismantle the dread and mobilize against the last socially...
Instructional Video2:47
MinuteEarth

The Actual Reason Men Die First

12th - Higher Ed
Because females often outlive males, behavior is often blamed - but there is a decent chance our sex chromosomes might be to blame instead.
Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do we have to wear sunscreen? - Kevin P. Boyd

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You already know that a trip to the beach can give you a nasty sunburn, but the nitty gritty of sun safety is actually much more complex. Wrinkle-causing UVA rays and burn-inducing UVB's can pose a serious risk to your health (and good...
Instructional Video10:05
TED Talks

TED: The beauty of what we'll never know | Pico Iyer

12th - Higher Ed
Almost 30 years ago, Pico Iyer took a trip to Japan, fell in love with the country and moved there. A keen observer of the human spirit, Iyer professes that he now feels he knows far less about Japan -- or, indeed, about anything -- than...
Instructional Video3:32
SciShow

3 Ways Your Sun Protection Can Backfire

12th - Higher Ed
People have a lot of ideas about how they can protect themselves from the sun’s ultraviolet radiation, but many of those ideas just don’t hold up, and some make things worse!
Instructional Video15:54
TED Talks

TED: 12 truths I learned from life and writing | Anne Lamott

12th - Higher Ed
A few days before she turned 61, writer Anne Lamott decided to write down everything she knew for sure. She dives into the nuances of being a human who lives in a confusing, beautiful, emotional world, offering her characteristic...
Instructional Video11:35
TED Talks

Laura Carstensen: Older people are happier

12th - Higher Ed
In the 20th century we added an unprecedented number of years to our lifespans, but is the quality of life as good? Surprisingly, yes! Psychologist Laura Carstensen shows research that demonstrates that as people get older they become...
Instructional Video4:52
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why do animals have such different lifespans? - Joao Pedro de Magalhaes

Pre-K - Higher Ed
For the microscopic lab worm C. elegans, life equates to just a few short weeks on Earth. The bowhead whale, on the other hand, can live over two hundred years. Why are these lifespans so different? And what does it really mean to 'age'...
Instructional Video4:22
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: A curable condition that causes blindness - Andrew Bastawrous

Pre-K - Higher Ed
An estimated 20 million cases of blindness worldwide are caused by cataracts, a curable condition affecting the lens that focuses images onto the eye's retina. But how are cataracts formed, and how can we prevent them? Andrew Bastawrous...
Instructional Video19:36
TED Talks

Dan Buettner: How to live to be 100+

12th - Higher Ed
To find the path to long life and health, Dan Buettner and team study the world's "Blue Zones," communities whose elders live with vim and vigor to record-setting age. In his talk, he shares the 9 common diet and lifestyle habits that...
Instructional Video2:57
MinuteEarth

Do We Have to Get Old and Die?

12th - Higher Ed
Do We Have to Get Old and Die?
Instructional Video3:57
SciShow

Hydras: Our Immortal, Tentacled Friends

12th - Higher Ed
While humans age and die (which is kind of a bummer), it looks like hydras will stay young and fertile forever. Why is this? And what can we learn from these tentacular microscopic organisms?
Instructional Video9:57
SciShow

Why We Age - And How We Can Stop It

12th - Higher Ed
Hank hates death, so he helps us understand the process of aging, informs us of how scientists are studying ways to prevent it and brings us the exciting news of current research in longevity... for mice.