Instructional Video11:25
Crash Course

Emmett Till: Crash Course Black American History

12th - Higher Ed
In 1955, a 14 year old boy named Emmett Till was brutally murdered in Money, Mississippi. The white men who murdered him killed him for being Black. Emmett Till's mother chose to have an open casket funeral, and show the world what had...
Instructional Video10:18
Crash Course

If One Finger Brought Oil - Things Fall Apart part I: Crash Course Literature 208

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you about Chinua Achebe's 1958 novel, Things Fall Apart. You'll learn about Igboland, a region in modern day Nigeria, prior to the arrival of the British Empire. Achebe tells the story of Okonkwo, an Igbo...
Instructional Video11:37
Crash Course

Value Proposition and Customer Segments: Crash Course Business - Entrepreneurship

12th - Higher Ed
Value is the core of any business, and it directs all future decisions, innovations, and customers that get targeted. Even if we’ve thought about the big picture, if we can’t explain how an idea makes someone’s life better, then why...
Instructional Video12:05
Crash Course

Bodies and Dollars: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
After World War Two, the applications of basic discoveries in biology took off—and became big business. Today, we’ll look at the rise of Big Pharma and GMO foods. We’ll also discuss how life-science technologies fundamentally changed...
Instructional Video11:31
Crash Course

Eugenics and Francis Galton: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
After Darwin blew the doors off the scientific community, a lot of people did some weird and unscientific stuff with his ideas. Francis Galton and a few others decided natural selection could be used to make the human race "better" and...
Instructional Video13:00
Crash Course

Darwin and Natural Selection: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
"Survival of the Fittest" sounds like a great WWE show but today we're talking about that phrase as it relates to Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace. Darwin and Wallace are at the heart of understanding evolution and natural selection....
Instructional Video15:06
Crash Course

The French Revolution: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
In 1789, the French Monarchy's habit of supporting democratic popular revolutions in North America backfired. Today, we're talking about the French Revolution. Across the world, people were rising up to throw off monarchies, and Louis...
Instructional Video20:30
TED Talks

TED: No one should die because they live too far from a doctor | Raj Panjabi

12th - Higher Ed
Illness is universal -- but access to care is not. Physician Raj Panjabi has a bold vision to bring health care to everyone, everywhere. With the 2017 TED Prize, Panjabi is building the Community Health Academy, a global platform that...
Instructional Video9:25
TED Talks

Joel Leon: The beautiful, hard work of co-parenting

12th - Higher Ed
"Co-parenting" isn't a buzzword -- it's a way of showing up for your family openly, consistently and lovingly, says storyteller and father Joel Leon. In this moving talk, he challenges all parents to play an equal, active role in their...
Instructional Video10:32
Crash Course

The Periodic Table: Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gives us a tour of the most important table ever, including the life story of the obsessive man who championed it, Dmitri Mendeleev. The periodic table of elements is a concise, information-dense catalog of all of the different...
Instructional Video11:23
Crash Course

Their Eyes Were Watching God: Crash Course Literature 301

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green reads Zora Neale Hurston's novel, "Their Eyes Were Watching God," and talks to you about it. You'll learn about Zora Neale Hurston's life, and we'll also look at how the interpretations of the book have changed over...
Instructional Video3:55
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Shunan Teng: The Chinese myth of the white snake and the meddling monk

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Xu Xian had just received an invitation to the opening ceremony of a new temple. His wife, Bai Su Zhen, warned him not to attend, but Xu Xian, a devout Buddhist, felt obligated to make an appearance. What they didn't know was that these...
Instructional Video7:54
Be Smart

Ebola Explained

12th - Higher Ed
Don't panic.
Instructional Video5:42
TED Talks

TED: What soccer can teach us about freedom | Marc Bamuthi Joseph

12th - Higher Ed
Soccer is the only thing on this planet that we can all agree to do together, says theater maker and TED Fellow Marc Bamuthi Joseph. Through his performances and an engagement initiative called "Moving and Passing," Joseph combines...
Instructional Video14:29
TED Talks

Elizabeth Dunn: Helping others makes us happier -- but it matters how we do it

12th - Higher Ed
Research shows that helping others makes us happier. But in her groundbreaking work on generosity and joy, social psychologist Elizabeth Dunn found that there's a catch: it matters how we help. Learn how we can make a greater impact --...
Instructional Video5:39
TED Talks

TED: How to be an upstander instead of a bystander | Angélique Parisot-Potter

12th - Higher Ed
If you see something wrong in the workplace, what should you do? Business leader Angélique Parisot-Potter says you should speak up, even when it's scary. Sharing her personal experience of voicing concerns at work, she offers three...
Instructional Video18:19
TED Talks

TED: The ethical dilemma of designer babies | Paul Knoepfler

12th - Higher Ed
Creating genetically modified people is no longer a science fiction fantasy; it's a likely future scenario. Biologist Paul Knoepfler estimates that within fifteen years, scientists could use the gene editing technology CRISPR to make...
Instructional Video5:53
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is bipolar disorder? - Helen M. Farrell

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The word bipolar means 'two extremes.' For the many millions experiencing bipolar disorder around the world, life is split between two different realities: elation and depression. So what causes this disorder? And can it be treated?...
Instructional Video9:28
TED Talks

TED: Walk with Little Amal, a theatrical journey celebrating the refugee experience | Amir Nizar Zuabi

12th - Higher Ed
In a staggering display of creativity and community, theater director Amir Nizar Zuabi introduces "The Walk": a theatrical journey following a nine-year-old refugee girl named Amal (represented by a giant, lifelike puppet) as she makes...
Instructional Video7:01
TED Talks

TED: A beatboxing lesson from a father-daughter duo | Nicole Paris and ed Cage

12th - Higher Ed
Nicole Paris was raised to be a beatboxer -- when she was young, her father, ed Cage, used to beatbox her to sleep at night. Now the duo is known for their beatbox battles and jam sessions, which mix classic rap beats with electronic...
Instructional Video22:12
TED Talks

TED: 3 lessons of revolutionary love in a time of rage | Valarie Kaur

12th - Higher Ed
What's the antidote to rising nationalism, polarization and hate? In this inspiring, poetic talk, Valarie Kaur asks us to reclaim love as a revolutionary act. As she journeys from the birthing room to tragic sites of bloodshed, Kaur...
Instructional Video4:47
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: A host of heroes - April Gudenrath

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What can some of literature's most famous heroes teach us? From the epic hero (like Beowulf) to the tragic hero (like Oedipus), each has something distinctive to share. April Gudenrath describes the many faces of the fictional hero --...
Instructional Video2:12
MinuteEarth

How Much Does Meat Actually Cost?

12th - Higher Ed
Want to learn more about this video's topic? Here are some keywords to get your googling started: Externality: a cost or benefit caused by an activity that affects other parties but is not taken into consideration (e.g. by being...
Instructional Video12:25
PBS

Your Place in the Primate Family Tree

12th - Higher Ed
Purgatorius, a kind of mammal called a plesiadapiform, might've been one of your earliest ancestors. But how did we get from a mouse-sized creature that looked more like a squirrel than a monkey -- to you, a member of Homo sapiens?