Instructional Video13:25
Crash Course

Intro to Ecology: Why Did All These Elephants Die?: Crash Course Biology #5

12th - Higher Ed
Ecology is the study of the interactions of living things with each other and their environment. It’s a field that not only lets us explore the interconnections between living things, but also how our environment affects us, and how we...
Instructional Video2:38
MinuteEarth

Electrical Wires Made Of Bacteria

12th - Higher Ed
Most living things on Earth need oxygen to survive, but scientists discovered a species of bacteria that uses oxygen totally differently from every other organism on Earth.
Instructional Video13:16
SciShow

Why Does Everything Decay Into Lead

12th - Higher Ed
If you look at a copy of the periodic table, you might notice that basically every element after lead is labelled as radioactive. And the vast majority of those elements wind up decaying into some version of lead eventually. But why is...
Instructional Video6:23
TED Talks

TED: Your invitation to help build a sustainable future | Jim Snabe

12th - Higher Ed
If we want to avoid a climate disaster, we need much more radical leadership, says Jim Snabe, who knows a thing or two about leadership as chairman of the world's largest maritime shipping company. In a stirring talk, he encourages...
Instructional Video10:48
PBS

Could Life Evolve Inside Stars?

12th - Higher Ed
One of the most bizarre proposals for life not as we know it doesn’t even use atoms. It proposes that fundamental kinks and defects in the fabric of the universe - cosmic strings beaded with magnetic monopoles - may evolve into complex...
Instructional Video3:14
SciShow

Why Are Champagne Bubbles So Tidy?

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever noticed that the bubbles in your glass of Champagne are just.... fancier than other sparkling drinks? They form those lovely little columns of bubbles in a way that nothing else does - and it turns out there's some neat...
Instructional Video2:18
MinuteEarth

Why Do Heart Attacks Cause *Arm* Pain?

12th - Higher Ed
When the brain receives pain from an internal organ, it often projects the pain in the wrong place because of the way sensory nerve paths converge
Instructional Video2:12
MinutePhysics

Why is it Harder to Drive Backwards?

12th - Higher Ed
One Minute Physics provides an energetic and entertaining view of old and new problems in physics -- all in one minute!
Instructional Video3:41
SciShow

Inside the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow takes you inside the site of the world's worst nuclear disaster to show you how, nearly 30 years later, life has adapted and persisted.
Instructional Video4:05
SciShow

A Plastic That Conducts Electricity?

12th - Higher Ed
Plastics usually stop electricity in its tracks, but scientists have figured out a way to keep the electrons flowing. Hosted by: Hank Green
Instructional Video4:05
SciShow

3 Freaky Things Explained: Bug Sex, Polar Vortex and Chain Fountain!

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares the latest developments in science, this week demystifying three freaky things in nature: the polar vortex, why some bugs are infertile, and how a chain can appear to defy gravity. You're welcome!
Instructional Video9:36
PBS

Time Crystals!

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode of the Space Time Journal Club Matt discusses how two independent research teams created their own Time Crystals, a form of matter that breaks time translational symmetry and could be used in quantum computers.
Instructional Video4:29
SciShow

There's Alcohol in the Middle of the Galaxy!

12th - Higher Ed
There's a massive cloud in the center of our galaxy, and it's full of alcohol. Party in the Milky Way! But how did it get there? And what does it have to do with the search for life elsewhere in the universe? SciShow Space explains!
Instructional Video4:05
SciShow

3 Freaky Things Explained: Bug Sex, Polar Vortex and Chain Fountain!

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares the latest developments in science, this week demystifying three freaky things in nature: the polar vortex, why some bugs are infertile, and how a chain can appear to defy gravity. You're welcome!
Instructional Video4:00
MinuteEarth

Rise Of The Mesopredator🎵 (ft. ScienceWithTom)

12th - Higher Ed
Thanks to humans, old school apex predators are struggling to hold onto their perch at the top of the food chain. And now a new class of adaptable mesopredators are remaking the ecosystems they take over....
Instructional Video3:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Da Vinci's Vitruvian Man of math - James Earle

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What's so special about Leonard da Vinci's Vitruvian Man? With arms outstretched, the man fills the irreconcilable spaces of a circle and a square -- symbolizing the Renaissance-era belief in the mutable nature of humankind. James Earle...
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

Futuristic Spy Tech Self-Destructs in Sunlight | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
This week scientists invented futuristic technologies that sound made up by Hollywood’s spy movies, and we might be able to have infrared supervision without goggles...soon.
Instructional Video11:31
TED Talks

Sydney Jensen: How can we support the emotional well-being of teachers?

12th - Higher Ed
Teachers emotionally support our kids -- but who's supporting our teachers? In this eye-opening talk, educator Sydney Jensen explores how teachers are at risk of "secondary trauma" -- the idea that they absorb the emotional weight of...
Instructional Video18:00
TED Talks

Louise Fresco: We need to feed the whole world

12th - Higher Ed
Louise Fresco shows us why we should celebrate mass-produced, supermarket-style white bread. She says environmentally sound mass production will feed the world, yet leave a role for small bakeries and traditional methods.
Instructional Video8:03
Crash Course

Nomenclature - Crash Course Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
Ever feel like there's a international team of bad guys changing all of the easily remembered chemical names and turning them into test-failing, number-infused, pain in the neck names? Well... you're not wrong. IUPAC exists but try to...
Instructional Video4:49
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How to practice effectively...for just about anything - Annie Bosler and Don Greene

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Mastering any physical skill takes practice. Practice is the repetition of an action with the goal of improvement, and it helps us perform with more ease, speed, and confidence. But what does practice actually do to make us better at...
Instructional Video4:22
SciShow

The Sweetest Rocks in Space

12th - Higher Ed
Sugars aren’t just for munching and crunching, they also make up our genetic code! So what does it mean to find sugars INSIDE meteorites?
Instructional Video3:59
SciShow

Big Idea: Gunpowder

12th - Higher Ed
Chinese alchemists searching for an elixir of eternal life discovered the world's first chemical explosive. Hank has the full story on gunpowder in this SciShow about a big idea of science.
Instructional Video15:42
Crash Course Kids

Food Chains Compilation

3rd - 8th
Maybe you'd like to just hear about one topic for a while. We understand. So today, let's just watch some videos about how we get energy. And how one animal gets energy from another animal, or a plant. It's all about food chains and food...