Instructional Video4:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why is it so hard to break a bad habit? | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Many people deal with a nail-biting habit at some point in their lives. Some will go to great lengths to try to stop, employing strategies like dipping their hands in salt or wearing gloves. And while not all of us are nail-biters, most...
Instructional Video10:25
SciShow

Curious Orangutans and 4 Other Animals a Bit Different in Captivity

12th - Higher Ed
Surround a wild animal with humans, and there are bound to be some changes. Here are five animals that show differences in captivity.
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

3 Secrets About Ancient Earth, Hidden in Marine Fossils

12th - Higher Ed
Fossils can provide clues to the conditions that ancient species lived in, like what their environments felt like, how deep in the water some species lived, or even how long the Sun was out!
Instructional Video5:03
SciShow

How Tongues Helped Vertebrates Conquer Land

12th - Higher Ed
You might not think much of your tongue, but without it, we may have never conquered dry land and the world as we know it.
Instructional Video4:05
SciShow

When Two Species Mix

12th - Higher Ed
We often think of categories as fixed, with a species being a species no matter what. The thing is, life doesn’t have to follow our rules.
Instructional Video13:14
TED Talks

TED: Fashion has a pollution problem -- can biology fix it? | Natsai Audrey Chieza

12th - Higher Ed
Natsai Audrey Chieza is a designer on a mission -- to reduce pollution in the fashion industry while creating amazing new things to wear. In her lab, she noticed that the bacteria Streptomyces coelicolor makes a striking red-purple...
Instructional Video5:43
TED Talks

TED: Medical tech designed to meet Africa's needs | Soyapi Mumba

12th - Higher Ed
In sub-Saharan Africa, power outages, low technology penetration, slow internet and understaffed hospitals plague health care systems. To make progress on these problems in Malawi, TED Fellow Soyapi Mumba and his team created a new...
Instructional Video5:06
SciShow

How Tongues Helped Vertebrates Conquer Land

12th - Higher Ed
You might not think much of your tongue, but without it, we may have never conquered dry land and the world as we know it.
Instructional Video10:25
SciShow

Curious Orangutans and 4 Other Animals a Bit Different in Captivity

12th - Higher Ed
Surround a wild animal with humans, and there are bound to be some changes. Here are five animals that show differences in captivity.
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

3 Secrets About Ancient Earth, Hidden in Marine Fossils

12th - Higher Ed
Fossils can provide clues to the conditions that ancient species lived in, like what their environments felt like, how deep in the water some species lived, or even how long the Sun was out!
Instructional Video5:17
TED Talks

Jessica Green: Are we filtering the wrong microbes?

12th - Higher Ed
Should we keep the outdoors out of hospitals? Ecologist and TED Fellow Jessica Green has found that mechanical ventilation does get rid of many types of microbes, but the wrong kinds: the ones left in the hospital are much more likely to...
Instructional Video4:40
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why neutrinos matter - Silvia Bravo Gallart

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Elementary particles are the smallest known building blocks in the universe-and the neutrino is one of the smallest of the small. These tiny neutrinos can tell us about the furthest reaches and most extreme environments of the universe...
Instructional Video4:39
Crash Course Kids

Planetary Plants

3rd - 8th
So we know what life needs here to work, and we've talked a little about what life COULD look like on other planets. But what about plant life? What could plant life look like on other planets? In this episode of Crash Course Kids,...
Instructional Video4:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why are there so many insects? - Murry Gans

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If insects suddenly morphed into large beings and decided to wage war on us, there's no doubt that humans would lose. There are an estimated 10 quintillion individual insects on earth, outnumbering humans by more than a billion to one....
Instructional Video4:38
Crash Course Kids

Big Changes in the Big Forest

3rd - 8th
What do beavers, termites, and prairie dogs have in common? They all change their environments! Last time we talked about how humans change their environments, but humans are animals and all animals change their environments just by...
Instructional Video3:34
SciShow

Big Martian Lake!

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares the latest exciting findings from the Mars Science Laboratory, known to its friends as Curiosity. Learn what Curiosity has discovered about the giant Gale Crater, and what those developments mean for the prospects of ancient...
Instructional Video6:01
SciShow

NASA's Planetary Protection Job, and a Brand New Way to Study Neutrinos

12th - Higher Ed
The Planetary Protection Office is hiring and we've found a much easier way to study neutrinos.
Instructional Video10:56
TED Talks

TED: We could kick-start life on another planet. Should we? | Betül Kaçar

12th - Higher Ed
Life makes our planet an incredibly exotic place compared to the rest of the known universe, says astrobiologist Betül Kaçar, whose research uses statistics and mathematical models to simulate ancient environments and gather insights...
Instructional Video3:38
SciShow

Understanding the Most Extreme Numbers in the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Humans are great at understanding medium-sized things, like how far the supermarket is from your house, or how to find the bathroom in the dark. But imagining distances in light-years is a lot harder -- so you'll have to use a trick or two.
Instructional Video7:26
TED Talks

TED: How PhotoSynth can connect the world's images | Blaise Agüera y Arcas

12th - Higher Ed
Blaise Aguera y Arcas leads a dazzling demo of Photosynth, software that could transform the way we look at digital images. Using still photos culled from the Web, Photosynth builds breathtaking dreamscapes and lets us navigate them.
Instructional Video2:09
MinuteEarth

How This River Made Chimps Violent

12th - Higher Ed
When a group of apes got split apart, slight differences in their new environments led to big differences in future generations.
Instructional Video3:03
SciShow

Dangerously Smart: Why This Fish Almost Beached Itself

12th - Higher Ed
Fish are smarter than you think! Scientists have explored triggerfish's ability to learn some clever hunting tactics.
Instructional Video4:57
Crash Course Kids

Big Changes in the Big Apple

3rd - 8th
Did you know that all living things change their environments? It's true. Beavers, deer, worms, and humans all change their environments. It just so happens that humans change our environments in big, obvious ways. In this episode,...
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

What Studying Earth Can Tell Us About Life on Mars

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists conduct some pretty cool research experiments for Mars here on Earth. These terrestrial analogues have revealed some incredible discoveries!