Instructional Video5:07
SciShow Kids

Where Can We Find Water? | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewWhere does water come from? If you turn on the faucet, there's water. But it goes on an incredible journey to get there. Today, Jessi and Squeaks learn about all the places we can find water.
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow Kids

Water Made the Grand Canyon! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewBill and Webb want to know: What's stronger, wind or water? Both of them can change the shape of the land. So which one does it better?
Instructional Video5:27
SciShow Kids

The Biggest Volcano Ever is in Space! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewJessi and Sam the Bat talk about the biggest volcano ever that we know of. And it's not on Earth. It's Olympus Mons, on the planet Mars!
Instructional Video5:53
SciShow Kids

The Fiordlands of New Zealand! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is back from his trip around the world! In this episode, he and Jessi discuss the second stop on his trip: Fiordlands National Park (aka Te Rua-o-te-moko) in New Zealand (aka Aotearoa)
Instructional Video6:24
SciShow Kids

Water's Amazing Journey | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewWater makes an amazing journey around the world called the water cycle. Squeaks and his friends put on a play to learn all about it!
Instructional Video6:18
SciShow Kids

Iceland: A Land of Ice AND Fire! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is back from his trip around the world! In this episode, he and Jessi discuss the final stop on his trip: Vatnajökull National Park in Iceland.
Instructional Video6:38
SciShow Kids

Igneous Rocks Used to Be Liquid! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewA new friend Savannah and Sam learn about different kinds of igneous rocks, which form after liquid magma or lava cools into solid rock.
Instructional Video6:50
SciShow Kids

Yellowstone: The World’s First National Park! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is back from his trip around the world! In this episode, he and Jessi discuss the first stop on his trip: Yellowstone National Park.
Instructional Video7:26
SciShow Kids

Senses You Didn’t Know You Have | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is heading on a trip around the world! He's going to experience so many things, using senses he didn't even know he (or his human friend Jessi) has! In this episode, he learns about senses beyond the common 5 (sight, hearing,...
Instructional Video7:38
SciShow Kids

How Metamorphic Rocks Are Like Butterflies | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewAfter learning about igneous and sedimentary rocks, Savannah and Sam learn about the final main kind of rock: metamorphic rocks. And they review how each of these rocks can turn into another!
Instructional Video7:43
SciShow Kids

Hawai’i: Land of Volcanoes | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is looking to plan his next vacation. Jessi tells him all about the amazing volcanoes you can find in
Instructional Video7:44
SciShow Kids

How Eyes Let Us See The World | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is heading on a trip around the world! He's going to see so much, and wants Jessi to experience those sights, too. In this episode, he learns about how humans (and a couple of other animal guests) see.
Instructional Video7:59
SciShow Kids

The Many Layers of Sedimentary Rocks | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewJessi and Sam learn about sedimentary rocks and show how you can use vinegar to identify a piece of limestone.
Instructional Video8:03
SciShow Kids

How Ears Let Us Hear the World! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewSqueaks is heading on a trip around the world! He's going to hear so many cool sounds, and wants Jessi to experience them, too. In this episode, he learns about how humans (and a couple of other animal guests) hear.
Instructional Video8:03
SciShow Kids

Every Kind of Volcano | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
New ReviewJessi and Sam the Bat learn about every kind of volcano. Some erupt suddenly and some erupt slowly. Some are tall, some aren't big mountains at all, and some stopped erupting a long time ago. But they're all volcanoes!
Instructional Video10:19
SciShow Kids

Mountains And Volcanoes! | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
New ReviewIn this SciShow Kids compilation, Jessi and Squeaks learn about the amazing geological processes that form mountains and volcanoes.
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

The century-old technology that could change the world | Rachel Yang

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Industrial manufacturers spend a huge amount of energy generating heat to make everyday materials and objects, like cement, steel, and paper. And since most companies use fossil fuels to reach these high temperatures, industrial heat...
Instructional Video5:10
TED-Ed

Why don’t we get our drinking water from the ocean? | Manish Kumar

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Humans have been transforming seawater into potable freshwater for millennia. Today, billions of people can’t access clean drinking water, and 87 different countries are projected to be “water-scarce” by 2050. So, how can we use seawater...
Instructional Video5:48
TED-Ed

The dark history of arsenic | Neil Bradbury

Pre-K - Higher Ed
No substance has been as constant an ally to insidious scheming as arsenic, the so-called “king of poisons.” In its chemically pure form, it isn’t much of a threat because our bodies don’t absorb it well; it’s when arsenic combines with...
Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

What would happen if the Amazon Rainforest disappeared? | Anna Rothschild

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As of 2022, humans have deforested 17% of the Amazon, and scientists warn that we may be approaching a tipping point. It’s like removing bricks from a house: take a few and the house remains standing; remove too many and the whole thing...
Instructional Video5:09
TED-Ed

How are microchips made? | George Zaidan and Sajan Saini

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Globally, we produce more than a trillion computer chips every year. Which means about 20 trillion transistors are built every second— and this process is done in fewer than 500 fabrication plants. How do we build so many tiny,...
Instructional Video4:59
TED-Ed

Rocks could save the world (Yes, rocks) | Elise Cutts

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Mount Teide is one of the world’s largest active volcanoes, and there may be a way to use the basalt rock inside it to save humanity. Obviously, destroying an ancient volcano would cause catastrophic and unpredictable ecological fallout....
Instructional Video5:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How scientists are creating real-life invisibility cloaks | Max G. Levy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A spy presses a button on their suit and blinks out of sight. A wizard wraps himself in a cloak and disappears. A star pilot flicks a switch, and their ship vanishes into space. Invisibility is one of the most tantalizing powers in...
Instructional Video4:12
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The world’s longest-burning fires | Emma Bryce

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1997, a fire began in Indonesia that would rage for almost a year. Despite being one of the largest fires in recorded history, for months at a time it burned without a flame. This might sound like a uniquely freaky fire, but it’s...