Instructional Video2:47
MinuteEarth

In The Future, Death Will Be Different

12th - Higher Ed
In the future, humans will likely die of a very different suite of causes than we do now, thanks to advances in healthcare, an aging population, and changes in the environment.
Instructional Video3:33
MinuteEarth

When Was The Worst Time In History To Die?

12th - Higher Ed
By combining historical demography and epidemiology, we can (sort of) determine how people throughout history have died.
Instructional Video6:02
SciShow

Why NASA Uses Satellites and Airplanes to Study Frogs

12th - Higher Ed
Why NASA Uses Satellites and Airplanes to Study Frogs
Instructional Video6:05
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The epidemics that almost happened | George Zaidan

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 2013, an Ebola outbreak began in Guinea. The country had no formal response system and the outbreak became the largest Ebola epidemic in recorded history. Guinea then completely overhauled their response system, and were able to...
Instructional Video5:08
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Ethical dilemma: Should we get rid of mosquitoes? | Talya Hackett

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Mosquitoes are responsible for more human deaths every year than any other animal, but very few of the 3,500 mosquito species actually transmit deadly diseases to humans. Scientists have been conducting experiments using engineered...
News Clip8:14
PBS

Inequities In Care, Misinformation Fuel Covid Deaths Among Poor, Indigenous Brazilians

12th - Higher Ed
All across Brazil, slums — known as Favelas — have long been places of crime and poverty, marked by overcrowding and unsanitary conditions. They are among the hardest hit by the pandemic, in a country where the death toll just passed...
News Clip16:42
PBS

What Dr. Fauci wants you to know about face masks and staying home as virus spreads

12th - Higher Ed
As COVID-19 spreads across the country, there has been some debate over the need for government stay-at-home orders, whether Americans should be wearing masks in public and how the coronavirus spreads. Dr. Anthony Fauci of the National...
Instructional Video5:25
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Ethical dilemma: The burger murders | George Siedel and Christine Ladwig

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You founded a company that manufactures meatless burgers that are sold in stores worldwide. But you've recently received awful news: three people in one city died after eating your burgers. A criminal has injected poison into your...
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

FAQs About the New Flu

12th - Higher Ed
In today's news, Michael Aranda stands in for Hank to talk about this year's flu season. And no, Hank isn't out sick with the flu - he's on the road and out of the studio for a few weeks!
Instructional Video3:50
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Defining cyberwarfare in hopes of preventing it - Daniel Garrie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Can you imagine a future where wars are fought not with bombs and bullets but computer viruses and pacemaker shutdowns? Cyberware is unique in that it is not covered by existing legal framework and it often inspires more questions than...
Instructional Video6:02
SciShow

Why NASA Uses Satellites and Airplanes to Study Frogs

12th - Higher Ed
Frogs falling victim in the past to one of the biggest destroyers of biodiversity didn’t have much hope, that is, until humans thought to get a bird’s eye view.
Instructional Video2:14
SciShow

Can Hanging Upside Down Kill You?

12th - Higher Ed
When you were a kid, did anyone ever tell you that your head would explode if you hung upside down for too long? Well... they might have been on to something.
Instructional Video10:03
TED Talks

Steven Johnson: How the "ghost map" helped end a killer disease

12th - Higher Ed
Author Steven Johnson takes us on a 10-minute tour of The Ghost Map, his book about a cholera outbreak in 1854 London and the impact it had on science, cities and modern society.
Instructional Video12:56
TED Talks

Richard Weller: Could the sun be good for your heart?

12th - Higher Ed
Our bodies get Vitamin D from the sun, but as dermatologist Richard Weller suggests, sunlight may confer another surprising benefit too. New research by his team shows that nitric oxide, a chemical transmitter stored in huge reserves in...
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow

That Time the US Government Poisoned Alcohol

12th - Higher Ed
The alcohol we drink is just one particular kind of alcohol: ethanol. The others can be a lot more dangerous, and in the 1920s, the US government made a really dangerous cocktail.
Instructional Video7:25
TED Talks

TED: The playful wonderland behind great inventions | Steven Johnson

12th - Higher Ed
Necessity is the mother of invention, right? Well, not always. Steven Johnson shows us how some of the most transformative ideas and technologies, like the computer, didn't emerge out of necessity at all but instead from the strange...
Instructional Video0:59
SciShow

How the Big Game affects Heart Health #shorts #science

12th - Higher Ed
How the Big Game affects Heart Health #shorts #science
Instructional Video2:22
SciShow

Is Australia Trying to Kill You

12th - Higher Ed
Australia: An entire continent so infested with deadly creepy crawlies and creatures of all kinds, it seems like it’s actively trying to kill you. But is the natural world really any more dangerous down under than anywhere else?
Instructional Video1:53
MinuteEarth

Why You’re More Likely To Die In Winter

12th - Higher Ed
There’s a huge seasonal difference in death rates that is propelled by a variety of factors including pathogen behavior and anatomical response to temperature changes.
Instructional Video5:58
TED-Ed

Who were Las Mariposas, and why were they murdered? | Lisa Krause

Pre-K - Higher Ed
For over 30 years, thousands of people were imprisoned, tortured, and murdered under Rafael Trujillo's dictatorship in the Dominican Republic. Three sisters would go on to lead an underground revolution. But while their courage inspired...
Instructional Video7:41
Be Smart

The Deadliest Flu Season in History?

12th - Higher Ed
The flu might feel like some minor illness that you don't need to worry about much, but tens of thousands of people still die from it every year. And back in 1918, Flu killed up to 5% of the world's population. Could a flu that bad...
Instructional Video10:08
Bozeman Science

Exponential Growth

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how populations experience exponential. He begins by address the major players; N (population size) and r (growth rate). He models population growth in rabbits through four generations. He then shows you how to use...
Instructional Video11:14
Bozeman Science

Human Population Dynamics

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explores population dynamics of the human population. The population has show exponential growth since the industrial revolution and all countries will eventually move through the demographic transition. If...
Instructional Video12:09
Bozeman Science

Population Ecology

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how population ecology studies the density, distribution, size, sex ration, and age structure of populations. Intrinsic growth rate and exponential growth calculations are included along with a...