Instructional Video7:37
Be Smart

The Deadpool Salamander

6th - 12th Standards
Much like your favorite superhero, the axolotl has amazing super powers! Explore the extraordinary world of the salamander that never grows up in a video from a larger science playlist. Content includes axolotl behavior versus normal...
Instructional Video9:11
Amoeba Sisters

Specialized Cells: Significance and Examples

7th - 12th Standards
All cells are created equal, but some go on to do amazing things! Find out more about these super hero cells with a short video from a well-written biology playlist. Topics include specialized plant and animal cells and how cells know to...
Instructional Video3:16
FuseSchool

Intro to Cells: Animal, Plant, Nerve and Red Blood Cells

6th - 12th Standards
Throw your dendrites in the air and wave 'em like you just don't care! An excellent video in the Fuse School playlist explains the parts and functions of cells. It describes their structures, functions, and specialties.
Instructional Video2:44
SciShow

Why Do Animals Lick Their Wounds?

9th - 12th
Are there healing properties in saliva? Apparently. A video describes the many benefits associated with an animal licking a wound. Unfortunately, as the lesson describes, there are also disadvantages.
Instructional Video5:42
TED-Ed

How We Think Complex Cells Evolved

7th - 12th Standards
Being able to absorb the abilities of other life forms may seem like something taken from a superhero movie, but sometimes reality is stranger than fiction. Join the narrator as he takes viewers back billions of...
Instructional Video5:34
TED-Ed

At What Moment Are You Dead?

7th - 12th Standards
When is a person no longer living? This question has been puzzled over for millennia, but is there a clear answer? Watch as this video examines the biological line separating life and death.
Instructional Video1:23
Curated OER

Animal Cells

7th - 12th
Check out this fantastic image of an animal cell, while a narrator describes each part. This is a great video to show your class at the beginning of an animal cell lesson.