Instructional Video3:32
Curated Video

What Are Cobwebs? Where Do They Come From?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Most cobwebs actually consist of abandoned spider webs. These home-abandoning spiders, mainly those of the species Theridiidae, build these sticky webs for catching prey. Web-building spiders create elaborate webs for catching prey...
Instructional Video4:40
Curated Video

How to Measure the Speed of Wind

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In this video, we explore the fascinating topic of measuring wind speed. We learn about the units used, the different types of anemometers used to measure wind speed, and the importance of understanding wind speed in various aspects of...
Instructional Video4:40
Curated Video

Dust Storms: Causes, Effects, and Precautions

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This video provides an overview of dust storms, explaining their causes, effects, and hazards. It emphasizes the importance of taking cover quickly during a dust storm and highlights the damage they can cause to structures, equipment,...
Instructional Video5:25
Super Geek Heroes

Helpful People with Suzi Smiles

Pre-K - K
Fun 3D animated learning episodes to support the early years development areas of PSED. Suzi Smiles is a Super Geek Hero on a mission to learn! Suzi wakes up and opens her toy box. Inside she discovers lots of dressing up clothes and...
Instructional Video4:57
Weatherthings

Weather Things: Hurricane Structure

6th - 8th
For their size and impact, hurricanes are often called the greatest storms on Earth. They expend a tremendous amount of energy through the water cycle, and through wind, to maintain the balance of the atmosphere. Known by different names...
Instructional Video0:24
The March of Time

Museum of Modern Art

12th - Higher Ed
MOT 1939: MOMA: People walking on 5th. Avenue traffic BG. EXT Museum of Modern Art (MOMA 11 W. 53rd. Street). Women entering revolving museum doors. INT MOMA Front counter. Women walking past painting 'La Danse' by Henri Matisse.
Instructional Video41:34
Science360

America's Scientist Idol game show

12th - Higher Ed
The battle is on for the title of "America's Scientist Idol." Videotaped at the 2013 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, this "game show" pits six scientists against each other to see who can best...
Instructional Video15:58
Astrum

Our Solar System's Planets: Saturn

Higher Ed
Everything you could want to know about Saturn!
Instructional Video2:14
Curated Video

The Life Cycle of Stars and the Impact of Mass

9th - Higher Ed
The video explains the life cycle of a star, starting from a nebula, gravitational pull forming a protostar, the process of nuclear fusion, formation of a main sequence star, production of elements through fusion, expansion of a main...
Instructional Video4:41
Bethany Thiele, Art Teacher

Plaster and Paint Pumpkin Part 1 - Build

K - 5th
This video shows you how to build a pumpkin using a plastic bag, newspaper or paper towels, string, and tape! Part 2 of the series will show you how to add plaster, and Part 3 will show you how to paint. I hope you enjoy this fun and...
Instructional Video2:30
Science360

ALMA Seeing The Universe In A Whole New Light

12th - Higher Ed
At first glance, the bone-dry landscape of the Atacama Desert in Chile might seem inhospitable. But, it's prime real estate for astronomers. This desert is now home to the largest ground-based radio telescope in the world! The telescope...
Instructional Video2:43
NASA

Simulated Image Demonstrates the Power of NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope

K - 11th
NASA’s Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope will capture the equivalent of 100 high-resolution Hubble images in a single shot, imaging large areas of the sky more than 1,000 times faster than Hubble. In several months, the Roman Space...
Instructional Video4:51
Science360

Very Large Array observatory reveals the universe - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes, star births and deaths, colliding galaxies and more -- all in a day's work at the VLA The Very Large Array, or VLA, is a complex of 27 massive antennas on the Plains of San Agustin in central New Mexico, all pointing skyward...
Podcast24:05
NASA

Gravity Assist: A Special Delivery of Life’s Building Blocks, with Jason Dworkin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When Earth was just a baby, meteors and asteroids rained down, delivering all sorts of chemicals to our developing planet. These small objects could have delivered the chemicals needed to spark life on Earth for the first time.
Instructional Video1:10
Next Animation Studio

Iranians riot over water crisis, obsession with industrial growth

12th - Higher Ed
Increasingly severe droughts are revealing the folly of the Islamic regime’s obsession with industrial growth.
Instructional Video12:22
Neuro Transmissions

Losing The Nobel Prize

12th - Higher Ed
The Nobel Prize is often viewed as the ultimate achievement in science. But to what extent would you go to win it? In 2014, astronomer Dr. Brian Keating invented BICEP2, the most powerful cosmology telescope ever made. Using this, he...
Instructional Video2:31
Science360

National Ice Core Lab Stores Valuable Ancient Ice

12th - Higher Ed
It's a freezing cold day inside the National Ice Core Laboratory (NICL) in Denver, Colo., as it is every day of the year. That's because the NICL is a facility for storing and studying ice cores recovered from the polar regions of the...
Instructional Video1:50
Visual Learning Systems

Our Distant Neighbors: Other Objects in the Solar System

9th - 12th
Upon viewing the Our Distant Neighbors video series, students will be able to do the following: Create a simple diagram of the sun and the orbital paths of each planet around the sun. Label each of the eight planets. Explain that the sun...
Instructional Video2:51
TMW Media

Searching for Life in the Galaxy: How to find planets outside our solar system

K - 5th
How do stars form? How do planets form? How do scientist find other planets? Searching for Life in the Galaxy, Part 3
Instructional Video4:04
Amor Sciendi

Madonna of the Rosary and the Counter Reformation

12th - Higher Ed
We collaborated with blogger Amy Martin of Caravaggista for this lesson on Caravaggio and the Counter Reformation.
Instructional Video2:06
Next Animation Studio

ESA’s Solar Orbiter to pass through tails of comet ATLAS

12th - Higher Ed
The European Space Agency’s Solar Orbiter has been given the rare opportunity to conduct some “bonus science” in a serendipitous rendezvous with the tails of the comet ATLAS during the next few days, the space agency detailed in an...
Instructional Video7:45
Mazz Media

What is a Planet? (Simple English)

6th - 8th
This live-action video program is about the word planet. The program is designed to reinforce and support a student's comprehension and retention of the word planet through use of video footage, photographs, diagrams and colorful,...
Instructional Video1:32
Next Animation Studio

Meteor killed dinosaurs with dust, not wildfires, study finds

12th - Higher Ed
New research shows that the great dinosaur die-off was caused by airborne particles ejected directly from the crater made by the Chicxulub meteor
Instructional Video3:42
Bethany Thiele, Art Teacher

Plaster and Paint Pumpkin Part 2 - Plaster

K - 5th
Bethany Thiele, Art Teacher demonstrates Plaster and Paint Pumpkin Part 2 - Plaster