Instructional Video5:29
SciShow Kids

How Do Bees Make Honey? | The Science of Food! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
A lot of our food comes from plants, including honey! Mister Brown and Squeaks learn how honey goes from being watery nectar in a flower to the sweet sticky substance we all know and love - and it's all thanks to bees!
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow Kids

The Layers of the Redwood Forest | Explore the Redwoods | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
There's all sorts of life in the Redwood forest, but not just in the ground, different animals live in all layers of the Redwoods!
Instructional Video10:52
TED Talks

TED: The wheat field that could change the world | Guntur V. Subbarao

12th - Higher Ed
Crop physiologist Guntur V. Subbarao and his team have developed an antibiotic-infused strain of wheat that naturally combats harmful, fertilizer-eating bacteria -- a "monster" contributor to climate change. Learn more about how this...
Instructional Video9:27
TED Talks

TED: The fascinating physics of insect pee | Saad Bhamla

12th - Higher Ed
Scientist Saad Bhamla is on a mission to answer a question most people don't think to ask: How do insects pee? Taking inspiration from the incredible "butt flickers" of the glassy-winged sharpshooter, Bhamla presents a fascinating study...
News Clip5:27
PBS

These Colorado preschoolers learn hands-on farming to prevent childhood obesity

12th - Higher Ed
As childhood obesity soars among low-income communities with limited access to fresh produce, some educators in Colorado are combating the problem by joining the farm-to-preschool movement. Now these preschoolers are learning their ABCs...
News Clip6:14
PBS

Italian olive trees are withering from this deadly bacteria

12th - Higher Ed
The Salento region in southern Italy is synonymous with its renowned olive groves, some of which are thousands of years old. But a deadly bacteria, which causes trees to wither, is threatening a critical part of Salento's livelihood and...
News Clip6:59
PBS

The race to develop coffee that can survive climate change

12th - Higher Ed
What has driven tens of thousands of Salvadorans to leave home, many for the U.S.? El Salvador's coffee beans suffered a devastating disease five years ago, and now face an even greater existential threat: climate change. Special...
News Clip7:55
PBS

Fighting to breathe in the world's most polluted city

12th - Higher Ed
Delhi now outranks Beijing as the world's most polluted city. Carbon dioxide, ozone and fine carbon particles get trapped over India's capital, mostly due to dirty fuels, causing long-term health consequences such as lung and heart...
News Clip9:08
PBS

Could indoor farming help address future food shortages?

12th - Higher Ed
By 2050, Earth’s population is expected to rise to 10 billion, while the resources on the planet continue to shrink. Researchers in the Netherlands are experimenting with one way to feed more people with less: growing crops indoors....
News Clip5:53
PBS

Aquaponic farming saves water, but can it feed the country?

12th - Higher Ed
Aquaponic Farming Saves Water, But Can It Feed The Country?
Instructional Video13:25
Bozeman Science

AP Biology Labs - part 1

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen details the first 7 of 13 labs in the AP Biology Curriculum. The following topics are all covered: Artificial Selection, Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium, Comparing DNA using BLAST, Diffusion and Osmosis, Photosynthesis,...
Instructional Video10:06
Bozeman Science

Bioenergetics

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen introduces the concept of bioenergetics. He explains how living organisms utilize free energy in the Universe. He begins with a brief discussion of thermodynamics and Gibbs free energy. He then explains how reactions can be...
Instructional Video8:35
SciShow

Tracking Plant Genetics Through Art

12th - Higher Ed
Just like animals, plants evolve and change over time. And you might think we'd be looking for things like fossils to figure out how they've changed, but some scientists are using a far less traditional resource: art.
Instructional Video2:28
SciShow

Is There Less Oxygen in the Winter Since Its Colder

12th - Higher Ed
Plants make oxygen using photosynthesis, but what happens to the air when those trees drop their leaves in winter?
Instructional Video11:33
SciShow

What Fake Fragrances Teach Us About Sustainability

12th - Higher Ed
Humans love to make perfumes and fragrances from the weirdest sources, And to protect those sources, we sometimes come up with synthetic alternatives....which then create their own sets of environmental problems.
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow Kids

Keeping Our Water Clean!

K - 5th
Where does the water on the road go after a rain day? And taking care of them can be very important! Second Grade Next Generation Science Standards Disciplinary Core Idea: ESS2.C: The Roles of Water in Earth’s Surface Processes - Water...
Instructional Video4:23
SciShow

Oh No...Is Nature Going to Make Climate Change WORSE?! | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Photosynthesis plays a huge role in regulating the earth's CO2. But what happens when the temperature gets high enough that photosynthesis slows down?
Instructional Video4:48
SciShow Kids

The Story of George Washington Carver | Amazing Scientists | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks has a big problem! Every year, he grows lettuce in the Fort's greenhouse, but this year it just won't grow. Luckily, Mister Brown knows someone who can help Squeaks and his lettuce: botanist and inventor George Washington Carver!...
Instructional Video4:11
SciShow

Bioprecipitation: How Bacteria Makes Snow

12th - Higher Ed
Raindrops and snowflakes generally start to form around something else in the air, like a speck of dust, but sometimes that something else is bacteria.
Instructional Video5:56
Bozeman Science

LS1D - Information Processing

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how information is processed in in animals. He starts by describing the different forms of information and how they are received by receptors. He explains how information is received by the brain and...
Instructional Video10:34
SciShow

A Brief History of Life: When Life Exploded

12th - Higher Ed
Right at the beginning of the Paleozoic, there was a huge explosion of more complex life. And that’s when things started to get really interesting. This is our second installment on the history of life, but you can watch in any order you...
Instructional Video11:47
SciShow

6 Lonely Branches on the Tree of Life

12th - Higher Ed
When there’s only one species on an evolutionary branch, we call it a monospecific taxon. Studying these special species can help us better understand not just those sparse groups, but all life on this planet. Chapters Homo sapiens 0:53...
Instructional Video11:35
SciShow

5 Times Evolution Should Have Planned Ahead

12th - Higher Ed
Natural selection can lead to some pretty amazing adaptations, but sometimes the resulting traits aren’t the most efficient solutions to the problems at hand. With the bar set to “good enough,” here are some features that arose from...
Instructional Video1:57
SciShow

Do Plants Get Cancer?

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever seen a tree with a big, twisted knot growing out of it? That's just one way that plants can show signs of cancer. Quick Questions explains.