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Instructional Video11:43
TED Talks

TED: Enough red tape — we need to say yes to clean energy | Rich Powell

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewClimate innovation leader Rich Powell dives into the bureaucracy, bottlenecks and not-in-my-backyard attitude preventing the US from achieving its green energy goals, warning that we need about 10,000 new clean energy projects to be...
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Instructional Video11:11
TED Talks

TED: Why businesses need a dreamer's magic and a doer's realism | Beth Viner

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewAt work, the dreamers often get credit for the big ideas, but they can also sometimes seem untethered to reality to the doers, who are trying to ... get things done. It's when these two types of humans work in harmony that business magic...
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Instructional Video12:05
TED Talks

TED: When AI can fake reality, who can you trust? | Sam Gregory

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewWe're fast approaching a world where widespread, hyper-realistic deepfakes lead us to dismiss reality, says technologist and human rights advocate Sam Gregory. What happens to democracy when we can't trust what we see? Learn three key...
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Instructional Video12:12
TED Talks

TED: My mission to change the narrative of mental health | Glenn Close

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewLegendary actor and mental health advocate Glenn Close is on a quest to change how we think about mental health, starting with her decision to speak out about her own family's struggles — a brave choice considering the stigma that...
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Instructional Video12:51
TED Talks

TED: How to build a global pro-democracy movement | Yordanos Eyoel

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewDemocracy is the most compelling vision we have for self-governance, says freedom advocate Yordanos Eyoel. Taking a stand against predatory and opportunist authoritarian forces, she shares how to reimagine, accelerate and protect the...
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Instructional Video9:37
TED Talks

TED: The vital data you flush down the toilet | Newsha Ghaeli

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewEverybody pees and poops — and we know that urine and stool contain a rich source of information on our health, says data detective Newsha Ghaeli. Exploring the growing field of wastewater epidemiology, she shows how studying sewage can...
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Instructional Video8:16
TED Talks

TED: What's your leadership language? | Rosita Najmi

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIn a globe-trotting career that has spanned corporations, governments, nonprofits and philanthropy, Rosita Najmi has often found herself translating among them. Instead of focusing on leadership style, she makes the case for becoming...
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Instructional Video7:37
TED Talks

TED: Life is hard. Art helps | Liana Finck

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewCartoonist Liana Finck's drawings hold our hands through life's predicaments, big and small: dating, breakups, what to make for dinner, how to leave a party without being rude, how to think about our relationship with God. In a funny,...
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Instructional Video11:25
Bozeman Science

Anatomy and Physiology

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewPaul Andersen introduces Anatomy and Physiology in this podcast. He starts by describing how the form of an object fits the function. He then explains the themes of homeostasis and hierarchy. He describes the four major types of tissues;...
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Instructional Video3:31
MinutePhysics

How Do Bikes Stay Up?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewLearn the about the physics that allows bikes to stay upright and in motion, even without a rider.
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Instructional Video4:02
Curated Video

How Was the Grand Canyon Formed?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewI was in Arizona recently for Phoenix Comic-Con, and had the amazing pleasure of seeing one of Earth's greatest natural wonders… the Grand Canyon. More than a mile deep, and several miles across, it just defies belief. But I couldn't...
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Instructional Video2:54
MinutePhysics

How Do We Know The Universe Is Accelerating?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe universe is expanding – this we know from looking at red shifts of distant galaxies – but the acceleration of the universe's expansion is harder to measure. It requires measuring the change of recession velocity over time, and it's...
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Instructional Video2:36
Curated Video

Relative Humidity Isn't What You Think It Is

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewHave you ever wondered why 75% humidity in the summer feels sticky, but 75% humidity in the winter feels super dry? Turns out, the common definition of humidity is inconvenient and confusing. But there is a better way!
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News Clip9:16
Curated Video

Coping With Alzheimer's: A Mother & Daughter Portrait Of Long-Term Care

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewAfter being diagnosed with Alzheimer's, professional artist Mary Wyant slowly lost her ability to paint and the ability to take care of herself. Ray Suarez examines the story of Mary and her daughter Rebecca, who is now her mother's...
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Instructional Video3:12
SciShow

Plasma, The Most Common Phase of Matter in the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewGet to know plasma, the most common, but probably least understood, phase of matter in the universe!
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Instructional Video2:05
MinutePhysics

Can humans really feel temperature?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewCan humans really feel temperature?
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News Clip9:28
Curated Video

What’s behind the shortage of workers who support people with disabilities

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe nearly five million direct care workers who support older adults and people with disabilities are the largest workforce in the U.S. But despite high demand, many are paid little more than minimum wage. A longstanding workforce...
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News Clip7:24
Curated Video

Why a growing number of American men say they are in a ‘friendship recession’

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewAmerican men are stuck in what’s been dubbed a friendship recession, with 20 percent of single men now saying they don’t have any close friends. More than half of all men report feeling unsatisfied with the size of their friend groups....
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News Clip5:42
Curated Video

New book ‘Eve’ dispels myths about human evolution and details female body’s role

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewWhere do we come from and how did we evolve into the beings and bodies we are today? The new book "Eve: How the Female Body Drove 200 Million Years of Human Evolution" argues for a better understanding of our origins with critical...
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News Clip6:06
Curated Video

Immersive exhibitions are changing the way people consume art

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIn recent years, immersive art exhibitions that place viewers amid the art have been a hot ticket. Popular ones featuring works from artists like van Gogh and Monet travel from city to city. But there are a growing number of permanent...
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News Clip6:57
Curated Video

How citizen investigators are helping the FBI track down Jan. 6 rioters

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe Jan. 6 investigation is the largest FBI operation in history. More than 1200 people have been charged and over 900 convicted. But it has stretched the bureau’s resources and has often had to rely on the work of citizen investigators...
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News Clip5:18
Curated Video

Eating disorders are affecting more adolescent boys: here’s why and what signs to look for

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewFor years, eating disorders were thought to predominantly affect women and girls. But it’s estimated that 1 in 3 people with the condition is male, and that 10 million American boys and men will struggle with it at some point in their...
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Instructional Video6:56
SciShow

Is JWST Living Up to the Hype?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe James Webb Space Telescope is the most ambitious space observatory ever launched, and nobody hyped it more than us. So is it putting in work? Oh, boy, yes. Yes it is.
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Instructional Video5:11
SciShow

There’s a New Biggest Animal (Maybe)

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewMove over, blue whale! Perucetus colossus, a basilosaurid whale that lived 39 million years ago, may have been the biggest animal ever. It has the heaviest skeleton ever found, which may make it the new largest animal of all time.