Instructional Video16:53
TED Talks

TED: The evolution of compassion | Robert Wright

12th - Higher Ed
Robert Wright uses evolutionary biology and game theory to explain why we appreciate the Golden Rule ("Do unto others..."), why we sometimes ignore it and why there’s hope that, in the near future, we might all have the compassion to...
Instructional Video10:09
Crash Course

Tricksters: An Introduction: Crash Course World Mythology 20

12th - Higher Ed
This week, Mike introduces you to Tricksters, starting with Anansi, the West African trickster god who is also sometimes a spider. Tricksters are, well, tricky. They're wise and foolish, they're promiscuous and amoral, but in a lot of...
Instructional Video11:50
TED Talks

TED: Why we need gender-neutral bathrooms | Ivan Coyote

12th - Higher Ed
There are a few things that we all need: fresh air, water, food, shelter, love ... and a safe place to pee. For trans people who don't fit neatly into the gender binary, public restrooms are a major source of anxiety and the place where...
Instructional Video12:43
TED Talks

TED: The profound power of gratitude and "living eulogies" | Andrea Driessen

12th - Higher Ed
Why do we often wait so long to recognize each other's gifts? Why are the truest compliments for the people we love often said only after they're no longer around to hear and savor them? Andrea Driessen makes the case for writing...
Instructional Video4:05
TED Talks

Lakshmi Pratury: The lost art of letter-writing

12th - Higher Ed
Lakshmi Pratury remembers the lost art of letter-writing and shares a series of notes her father wrote to her before he died. Her short but heartfelt talk may inspire you to set pen to paper, too.
Instructional Video12:09
Crash Course

George Orwell's 1984, Part 2: Crash Course Literature 402

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green continues discussing George Orwell's 1984. Today we're talking about what the novel 1984 has to say about what some have called today's surveillance society. We'll also look at the idea that language can be used as a...
Instructional Video11:44
Crash Course

The Presocratics: Crash Course History of Science

12th - Higher Ed
The Presocratics: Crash Course History of Science #2
Instructional Video12:44
Crash Course

The Norse Pantheon: Crash Course World Mythology

12th - Higher Ed
This week, we're headed north. To check out the gods of the Northmen. Or the Norse. That's right, we're talking Thor, Loki, Freyr, Freya, Odin, Frigg, Baldr, and Tyr. And Fenrir. And the Frost Giants. There's a lot to cover here, and...
Instructional Video10:07
Crash Course

The Heart, part 1 - Under Pressure: Crash Course A&P

12th - Higher Ed
Your heart gets a lot of attention from poets, songwriters, and storytellers, but today Hank's gonna tell you how it really works. The heart's ventricles, atria, and valves create a pump that maintains both high and low pressure to...
Instructional Video10:23
Crash Course

Muscles, part 1 - Muscle Cells: Crash Course A&P

12th - Higher Ed
We're kicking off our exploration of muscles with a look at the complex and important relationship between actin and myosin. Your smooth, cardiac, and skeletal muscles create movement by contracting and releasing in a process called the...
Instructional Video21:21
TED Talks

Mae Jemison: Teach arts and sciences together

12th - Higher Ed
Mae Jemison is an astronaut, a doctor, an art collector, a dancer ... Telling stories from her own education and from her time in space, she calls on educators to teach both the arts and sciences, both intuition and logic, as one -- to...
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 Video12:53
Crash Course

Where Did Theater Go? Crash Course Theater #18

12th - Higher Ed
The English Theater survived a lot of pushback from various powers that be, but in the 17th century, it had to go into hiding, from PURITANS. Let's take a look at how the English Civil War, Charles I's beheading, and the Restoration of...
Instructional Video12:17
Crash Course

The English Renaissance and NOT Shakespeare: Crash Course Theater #13

12th - Higher Ed
The Renaissance came to England late, thanks to a Hundred Years War that ran long and lasted 116 years, and then a civil war to decide who would be the royal family. BUT after all that, with the Tudors (relatively) securely installed on...
Instructional Video11:00
Crash Course

Hrotsvitha, Hildegard, and the Nun who Resurrected Theater: Crash Course Theater #9

12th - Higher Ed
When last we saw Theater, it was just making its way back in the West, by sneaking a little drama into the Easter mass. In today's episode, we're talking about Hrotsvitha, the cool 10th century nun from Lower Saxony who was maybe the...
Instructional Video12:33
TED Talks

TED: How fashion helps us express who we are -- and what we stand for | Kaustav Dey

12th - Higher Ed
No one thinks twice about a woman wearing blue jeans in New York City -- but when Nobel laureate Malala wears them, it's a political act. Around the globe, individuality can be a crime, and clothing can be a form of protest. In a talk...
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 Video7:01
Crash Course

Future Literacies: Crash Course Media Literacy

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve seen and discussed the ways in which the rapid pace of technological change has affected the media literacy landscape, and it’s clear that change isn’t slowing down. How will those changes affect the future of media literacy? How...
Instructional Video12:28
TED Talks

TED: You are the future of philanthropy | Katherine Fulton

12th - Higher Ed
In this uplifting talk, Katherine Fulton sketches the new future of philanthropy -- one where collaboration and innovation allow regular people to do big things, even when money is scarce. Giving five practical examples of crowd-driven...
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 Video4:04
SciShow Kids

Make Your Own Recycled Bird Feeders - #sciencegoals

K - 5th
Jessi's on spring break, but Dino's here to teach you about birds and how you can recycle items around the house to make bird feeders! #sciencegoals
Instructional Video4:05
SciShow

Mindcontrolling Parasites

12th - Higher Ed
Hank introduces us to some freaky parasites that use mind control to hijack the brains of their hosts.
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 Video5:34
Be Smart

The Science of Snowflakes

12th - Higher Ed
Snowflakes are infinitely beautiful, but are they infinitely unique? Here's all the science behind Earth's favorite cold crystal