Instructional Video4:05
Bozeman Science

What's the Best Way to Teach Science?

12th - Higher Ed
What's the Best Way to Teach Science?
Instructional Video4:57
SciShow

What Can You Learn from Your Dreams?

12th - Higher Ed
Dreaming is very weird, but you might be able to learn something from your dreams.
Instructional Video5:37
SciShow

3 Mars Mysteries We Really Should Have Solved By Now

12th - Higher Ed
We've learned a lot about Mars over the years, but we keep uncovering new mysteries - important, fundamental aspects of The Red Planet that we just can't explain. Here are three of them.
Instructional Video3:07
SciShow

Gravitation: The Four Fundamental Forces of Physics #3

12th - Higher Ed
Hank continues our series on the four fundamental forces of physics with a description of gravitation -the interaction by which physical bodies attract with a force proportional to that of their masses, and which is responsible for...
Instructional Video3:45
SciShow

Does Deep Space Cause Heart Disease?

12th - Higher Ed
A bizarre lonely star grows brighter, and we investigate a study that looks at whether astronauts that leave the magnetosphere have higher incidences of heart disease.
Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

How We Proved Earth Rotates Using a Giant Swinging Ball

12th - Higher Ed
People have suspected that Earth rotates for thousands of years, but how did we first prove it?
Instructional Video2:58
MinutePhysics

How To Go To Space (with XKCD!)

12th - Higher Ed
How To Go To Space (with XKCD!)
Instructional Video12:28
TED Talks

Jonathan Drori: What we think we know

12th - Higher Ed
Starting with four basic questions (that you may be surprised to find you can't answer), Jonathan Drori looks at the gaps in our knowledge -- and specifically, what we don't about science that we might think we do.
Instructional Video8:40
TED Talks

Hawa Abdi + Deqo Mohamed: Mother and daughter doctor-heroes

12th - Higher Ed
They've been called the "saints of Somalia." Doctor Hawa Abdi and her daughter Deqo Mohamed discuss their medical clinic in Somalia, where -- in the face of civil war and open oppression of women -- they've built a hospital, a school and...
Instructional Video5:12
TED Talks

Péter Fankhauser: Meet Rezero, the dancing ballbot

12th - Higher Ed
Engineering student Péter Fankhauser demonstrates Rezero, a robot that balances on a ball. Designed and built by students, Rezero is the first ballbot made to move quickly and gracefully -- and even dance. (Could the Star Wars sphere...
Instructional Video4:01
SciShow Kids

Fizzy Soda Experiment!

K - 5th
You're just in time to help Jessi and Squeaks with their baking soda and vinegar experiment! Then, stick around to learn all about chemists, special scientists who study chemicals!
Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Mary's Room: A philosophical thought experiment - Eleanor Nelsen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Imagine a neuroscientist who has only ever seen black and white things, but she is an expert in color vision and knows everything about its physics and biology. If, one day, she sees color, does she learn anything new? Is there anything...
Instructional Video4:12
SciShow

How to Study String Theory Using X-Rays - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Over the last few years astronomers have been doing more and more research based on string theory, and thanks to modern telescopes the results are... less than encouraging
Instructional Video5:54
SciShow

Is the Mystery of Earths 1.2 Billion Missing Years Solved SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
For the last hundred and fifty years or so, geologists have been trying to wrap their heads around the mystery: in some places, the geologic record just seems to jump by over billion years. And last week, a paper was published that may...
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

Why Is It So Hard to Let Go of Grudges?

12th - Higher Ed
We all have some displeasing memories from the past that still make our blood boil. Why are those grudges so hard to let go of?
Instructional Video7:06
SciShow

Why Physics Can't Totally Explain the Universe's Expansion - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Astronomers have gotten pretty good at calculating how fast the universe is expanding, but new measurements don’t line up with the predictions of well-tested laws of physics. Now scientists have a new question to ponder: Why are these...
Instructional Video10:38
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Stability and Change - Level 3 - Explaining Stability and Change

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on explaining stability and change. Two examples are included in the video and two additional examples are included in the linked thinking slides. TERMS Cause - a...
Instructional Video4:39
TED Talks

TED: A rare galaxy that's challenging our understanding of the universe | Burcin Mutlu-Pakdil

12th - Higher Ed
What's it like to discover a galaxy -- and have it named after you? Astrophysicist and TED Fellow Burcin Mutlu-Pakdil lets us know in this quick talk about her team's surprising discovery of a mysterious new galaxy type.
Instructional Video5:28
Crash Course

Types of Bureaucracies: Crash Course Government and Politics

12th - Higher Ed
This week Craig Benzine breaks down the different types of bureaucracies. I mean sure, they’re all part of the executive branch, but some work more directly with the president than others. Some bureaucracies exist solely to independently...
Instructional Video18:33
TED Talks

David Chalmers: How do you explain consciousness?

12th - Higher Ed
Our consciousness is a fundamental aspect of our existence, says philosopher David Chalmers: “There’s nothing we know about more directly…. but at the same time it’s the most mysterious phenomenon in the universe.” He shares some ways to...
Instructional Video10:17
PBS

How Cosmic Inflation Flattened the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
Although much of the Big Bang Theory is widely accepted to be true, it only gets us part of the way there. Observable truths such as the CMB and the flatness of our universe reveal that there is no way the universe has been expanding at...
Instructional Video5:27
SciShow

The Curious Case of Colic

12th - Higher Ed
Babies cry a lot, but some babies cry a lot more than others. These babies are said to have colic - and doctors aren’t totally sure what causes it.
Instructional Video4:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do we itch? - Emma Bryce

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The average person experiences dozens of individual itches each day. We've all experienced the annoyance of an inconvenient itch - but have you ever pondered why we itch in the first place? Is there actually an evolutionary purpose to...
Instructional Video8:21
SciShow

Faster Than Light Facts, Horny Little Man, and Worst Science Movie Winner!

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gets to the bottom of this "faster-than-the-speed-of-light-neutrino" kerfuffle, discusses some ancient stuff, and announces the winner of the award for worst science in a film