News Clip7:57
PBS

Poetry helps youth at a juvenile detention center find peace

12th - Higher Ed
Free Write Jail Arts and Literacy aims to help troubled youths in Chicago's Cook County Juvenile Temporary Detention Center address their personal issues by writing poetry about their circumstances and upbringing. Jeffrey Brown talks...
News Clip6:25
PBS

How This Philanthropist Hopes To Boost Mid-Career Women Artists

12th - Higher Ed
The work of women artists makes up only 3 to 5 percent of major museums' permanent collections in the U.S. and Europe. Many of these artists struggle financially -- but Susan Unterberg is trying to change that. For decades, the artist...
News Clip2:37
PBS

Why we need to stop sharing American Dream success stories

12th - Higher Ed
Why would author Casey Gerald want people to stop highlighting success stories like his own? Gerald says he grew up on "the wrong side of the tracks" and went on to Harvard Business school. But he says celebrations of the American Dream...
News Clip11:12
PBS

Jimmy Carter: Beyond the White House

12th - Higher Ed
Book: Beyond the White House
News Clip6:17
PBS

Spoken Word Club

12th - Higher Ed
Through verse, members of the Spoken Word Club at the Santa Fe Indian School articulate identities both modern and traditional, and maintain links to the past through native language and culture.
News Clip7:43
PBS

Can having a dog help you live longer?

12th - Higher Ed
A new scientific study from researchers in Sweden says having a dog can extend your life. Special correspondent Malcolm Brabant explains more from Uppsala, a city near Stockholm in Sweden.
News Clip6:11
PBS

Mentoring program aims to keep Latino males in school

12th - Higher Ed
On college campuses, Latino males are perhaps the most underrepresented group. These men are often expected to provide for their families, which can mean a choice between getting an education and getting a job. Hari Sreenivasan reports...
News Clip5:22
PBS

This graphic novelist and reaing ambassador tells kids to reach beyond their comfort zone

12th - Higher Ed
Graphic novelist Gene Luen Yang wrestled with his identity growing up, but he̥s made the Chinese-American experience one of the main subjects of his critically acclaimed work. One of this year̥s MacArthur Fellowship winners and the...
News Clip8:46
PBS

Briana Scurry - Concussions Interview (Goalie Briana Scurry is on a Mission to Educate Youth Soccer Players on Concussions)

12th - Higher Ed
Briana Scurry, former goalkeeper for the U.S. Women's National Soccer Team, discusses her experience with a career-ending concussion and her efforts to raise awareness of the concussions.
News Clip6:34
PBS

In India, this group helps turn wasteland into greener pastures

12th - Higher Ed
Most rural Indian parents dream of an education and job in the city for their children, rather than a life spent farming. But with a growing migration to cities, there is concern India might not be able to produce enough food to feed its...
News Clip7:05
PBS

What Quality Do The Most Successful People Share? True Grit

12th - Higher Ed
What makes a person successful? For Professor Angela Duckworth, the answer is grit, an intangible trait that motivates passion and perseverance. In a study at West Point, Duckworth found that grit mattered more for success than...
News Clip6:57
PBS

How These Employers Are Adapting To The Needs Of An Aging Workforce

12th - Higher Ed
As the population ages and older workers are making up more and more of the labor force, some employers are taking notice and adjusting their own practices to retain valuable experience and skills. Economics correspondent Paul Solman has...
News Clip7:37
PBS

Art and medicine intersect in New York City hospitals

12th - Higher Ed
It’s one of the largest public art collections in the country and it’s not where you might expect to see it. Artwork in New York hospitals aims to heal patients and healers. Jeffrey Brown continues his occasional look at the intersection...
Instructional Video6:38
Bozeman Science

PS3D - Energy in Chemical Processes and Everyday Life

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how energy is used in chemical processes and everyday life. Students should understand that energy is neither created or destroyed but is converted. Most of the energy is delivered to our planet from...
Instructional Video13:09
Crash Course

Political Thought in the Harlem Renaissance: Crash Course Black American History

12th - Higher Ed
When we think about the Harlem Renaissance, the arts come immediately to mind. But new political theories were also blossoming during this time. We'v talked about Booker T. Washington and W.E.B. DuBois, but today we'll get into some...
Instructional Video9:34
Bozeman Science

Cooperative Interactions

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen emphasizes the importance of cooperation in living systems. He starts with a brief description of game theory and why countries at peace do better over the long term. He then explains how microscopic cells cooperate in the...
Instructional Video6:34
Crash Course

Judicial Decisions: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
Today, Craig Benzine is going to dive into the factors that influence judicial decisions. As you may have noticed, the Supreme Court recently handed down some pretty big decisions on same-sex marriage (in Obergefell v Hodges) and the...
Instructional Video4:41
3Blue1Brown

Three-dimensional linear transformations: Essence of Linear Algebra - Part 5 of 15

12th - Higher Ed
How to think of 3x3 matrices as transforming 3d space
Instructional Video11:54
TED Talks

Aja Monet and phillip agnew: A love story about the power of art as organizing

12th - Higher Ed
In a lyrical talk full of radical imagination, poet Aja Monet and community organizer phillip agnew share the story of how they fell in love and what they've learned about the powerful connection between great social movements and...
Instructional Video5:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What happens if you cut down all of a city's trees? | Stefan Al

Pre-K - Higher Ed
By 2050, it's estimated that over 65% of the world will be living in cities. We may think of nature as being unconnected to our urban spaces, but trees have always been an essential part of successful cities. Humanity has been uncovering...
Instructional Video5:37
Bozeman Science

ETS1B - Developing Possible Solutions

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how many possible solutions are developed in the design process. As many solutions to the problem are identified using a brainstorming process. These solutions are compared to the specific constraints...
Instructional Video11:47
TED Talks

Kimberly Noble: How does income affect childhood brain development?

12th - Higher Ed
Neuroscientist and pediatrician Kimberly Noble is leading the Baby's First Years study: the first-ever randomized study of how family income changes children's cognitive, emotional and brain development. She and a team of economists and...
Instructional Video12:28
Crash Course

Randolph, Rustin, and the Origins of the March on Washington: Crash Course Black American History 32

12th - Higher Ed
The March on Washington of 1963 is an enduring and widely-known event of the Civil Rights movement. But the March has its roots in an earlier planned March on Washington that didn't happen. In 1941, labor leader A. Philip Randolph began...
Instructional Video12:04
Crash Course

Protests East and West: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
The post-World War II decades in Europe are sometimes called the Thirty Glorious Years. As those years wore on, tensions between East and West grew, and economic growth slowed or was unevenly distributed across Europe, protests and...