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Instructional Video5:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The fundamentals of space-time: Part 1 - Andrew Pontzen and Tom Whyntie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Space is where things happen. Time is when things happen. And sometimes, in order to really look at the universe, you need to take those two concepts and mash them together. In this first lesson of a three-part series on space-time,...
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Instructional Video5:43
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The sonic boom problem - Katerina Kaouri

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Objects that fly faster than the speed of sound (like really fast planes) create a shock wave accompanied by a thunder-like noise: the sonic boom. These epic sounds can cause distress to people and animals and even damage nearby...
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Instructional Video4:15
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Solving the puzzle of the periodic table - Eric Rosado

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How did the periodic table of elements revolutionize our understanding of the world? What scientists contributed to the table we have today? Eric Rosado discusses the key people and discoveries that have molded our understanding of...
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Instructional Video5:28
TED-Ed

Can you outsmart the apples and oranges fallacy? | Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's 1997. The United States Senate has called a hearing about global warming. Some expert witnesses point out that past periods in Earth's history were warmer than the 20th century. Because such variations existed long before humans,...
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Instructional Video4:44
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The history of marriage - Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A white, puffy dress. Eternal love. A joint tax return. Marriage means something different to everyone and has changed over time and across cultures. Alex Gendler traces the history of getting hitched, providing insights on polygamy,...
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Instructional Video4:51
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Blood, concrete, and dynamite: Building the Hoover Dam | Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the early 20th century, the US had expanded from coast to coast, but many cities in the southwest still lacked reliable water sources. The Colorado River's erratic flow and frequent floods made it unreliable for agriculture, and the...
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Instructional Video3:21
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do the lungs work? - Emma Bryce

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When you breathe, you transport oxygen to the body's cells to keep them working, while also clearing your system of the carbon dioxide that this work generates. How do we accomplish this crucial and complex task without even thinking...
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Instructional Video4:53
TED-Ed

Can you solve the monster duel riddle? | Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You've come a long way to compete in the great Diskymon league and prove yourself a Diskymon master. Now that you've made it to the finals, you're up against some tough competition. In round one, you'll face a single opponent and get to...
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Instructional Video3:55
SciShow Kids

Watch Soap Grow!

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks just did a really cool and easy experiment: they put a special kind of soap in the microwave and made it grow! Now they want to do it again to check their results and figure out how it happened!
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Instructional Video3:17
SciShow Kids

Why Does Ice Cream Hurt My Head?

K - 5th
Ice cream is a great treat, but you have to eat it slowly! Otherwise, you'll get what some people call a 'brain freeze,' which is a super bad headache that lasts for a couple seconds. But how does ice cream hurt your head?!
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Instructional Video3:07
SciShow Kids

Guess That Tree! Science for Kids

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks just spent the day hiking and sketching evergreen trees in their field journals! A lot of evergreen trees look pretty similar, but Jessi knows some fun ways to tell them apart. Join us to find out how!
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Instructional Video3:28
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The fundamentals of space-time: Part 3 - Andrew Pontzen and Tom Whyntie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the first two lessons of this series on space-time, we've dealt with objects moving at constant speeds, with straight world lines, in space-time. But what happens when you throw gravity into the mix? In this third and final lesson,...
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Instructional Video3:57
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why does ice float in water? - George Zaidan and Charles Morton

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Water is a special substance for several reasons, and you may have noticed an important one right in your cold drink: ice. Solid ice floats in liquid water, which isn't true for most substances. But why? George Zaidan and Charles Morton...
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Instructional Video4:51
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How smart are dolphins? - Lori Marino

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Dolphins are one of the smartest animal species on Earth. In fact, their encephalization quotient (their brain size compared to the average for their body size) is second only to humans. But exactly how smart are they? Lori Marino...
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Instructional Video9:00
National Geographic

360° Orangutan School | National Geographic

Pre-K - 11th
National Geographic VR takes you inside the International Animal Rescue sanctuary in the forests of Borneo to see what it takes to teach a baby orangutan… to be an orangutan. Here a dedicated team of vets teaches these orphans everything...
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Instructional Video5:27
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Hawking's black hole paradox explained | Fabio Pacucci

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Today, one of the biggest paradoxes in the universe threatens to unravel modern science: the black hole information paradox. Every object in the universe is composed of particles with unique quantum properties and even if an object is...
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Instructional Video6:15
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Ugly History: Cambodian Genocide | Timothy Williams

Pre-K - Higher Ed
From 1975 to 1979, the Communist Party of Kampuchea ruled Cambodia with an iron fist, perpetrating a genocide that killed one fourth of the country's population. Roughly one million people were executed as suspected political enemies or...
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Instructional Video3:29
SciShow Kids

Where Does Fog Come From? Weather for Kids

K - 5th
Fog might make things seem mysterious and spooky, but it's actually a cool natural phenomenon that happens when cold air affects the water in the air!
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Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The dangerous race for the South Pole - Elizabeth Leane

Pre-K - Higher Ed
By the early 1900’s, nearly every region of the globe had been visited and mapped, with only two key locations left: the North and South Poles. After two Americans staked claim to reaching the North Pole, a Norwegian explorer and a...
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Instructional Video4:40
TED-Ed

Why are airplanes slower than they used to be? | Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1996, a British Airways plane flew from New York to London in a record-breaking two hours and fifty-three minutes. Today, however, passengers flying the same route can expect to spend no less than six hours in the air — twice as long....
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Instructional Video4:49
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What is abstract expressionism? - Sarah Rosenthal

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you visit a museum with a collection of modern and contemporary art, you're likely to see works that sometimes elicit the response, _My cat could make that, so how is it art?" But is it true? Could anyone create one of Jackson...
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Instructional Video5:29
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Rethinking thinking - Trevor Maber

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Every day, we meet people and process our interactions--making inferences and developing beliefs about the world around us. In this lesson, Trevor Maber introduces us to the idea of a 'ladder of inference' and a process for rethinking...
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Instructional Video5:04
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The 4 greatest threats to the survival of humanity | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
With the invention of the atomic bomb, humanity gained the power to destroy itself for the first time in our history. Since then, our risk of either extinction or the collapse of civilization has steadily increased. Just how likely are...
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Instructional Video3:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The cancer gene we all have - Michael Windelspecht

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Within every cell in our body, two copies of a tumor suppressor gene called BRCA1 are tasked with regulating the speed at which cells divide. Michael Windelspecht explains how these genes can sometimes mutate, making those cells less...