Instructional Video3:55
SciShow Kids

Watch Soap Grow!

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks just did a really cool and easy experiment: they put a special kind of soap in the microwave and made it grow! Now they want to do it again to check their results and figure out how it happened!
Instructional Video16:48
TED Talks

TED: The gift and power of emotional courage | Susan David

12th - Higher Ed
Psychologist Susan David shares how the way we deal with our emotions shapes everything that matters: our actions, careers, relationships, health and happiness. In this deeply moving, humorous and potentially life-changing talk, she...
Instructional Video3:44
SciShow

Good Morning, Philae!

12th - Higher Ed
The Philae lander is awake! And it's sending us data straight from Comet 67P!
Instructional Video3:29
SciShow Kids

Where Does Fog Come From? Weather for Kids

K - 5th
Fog might make things seem mysterious and spooky, but it's actually a cool natural phenomenon that happens when cold air affects the water in the air!
Instructional Video11:26
TED Talks

TED: What makes a job "good" -- and the case for investing in people | Warren Valdmanis

12th - Higher Ed
Businesses need to stop cutting labor costs and start investing in people, says social impact investor Warren Valdmanis. In this perspective-shifting talk, he breaks down the essential ingredients of a "good" job -- which is more than...
Instructional Video18:57
TED Talks

TED: Nerdcore comedy | Ze Frank

12th - Higher Ed
Performer and web toymaker Ze Frank delivers a hilarious nerdcore standup routine, then tells us what he's seriously passionate about: helping people create and interact using simple, addictive web tools.
Instructional Video5:15
SciShow

Why Do Some People Love Horror Movies?

12th - Higher Ed
Fear is strong negative feeling and a good way for our brains to keep us out of danger, so why do some people seek it out by watching horror movies?
Instructional Video3:17
SciShow Kids

Why Does Springtime Make Me Sneeze? Body Science for Kids

K - 5th
Are you sneezing more as it gets nicer outside? Jessi and Squeaks talk about allergies, and explain what your body is going through!
Instructional Video6:16
TED Talks

TED: A new way to think about the transition to motherhood | Alexandra Sacks

12th - Higher Ed
When a baby is born, so is a mother -- but the natural (and sometimes unsteady) process of transition to motherhood is often silenced by shame or misdiagnosed as postpartum depression. In this quick, informative talk, reproductive...
Instructional Video3:31
SciShow

Circadian Rhythm and Your Brain's Clock

12th - Higher Ed
Why do we sleep at night instead of during the day? In this episode of SciShow Hank talks about circadian rhythms, how they work, and how they regulate different processes in our bodies.
Instructional Video6:17
TED Talks

Dan Barasch: A park underneath the hustle and bustle of New York City

12th - Higher Ed
Dan Barasch and James Ramsey have a crazy plan — to create a park, filled with greenery, underneath New York City. The two are developing the Lowline, an underground greenspace the size of a football field. They're building it in a...
Instructional Video4:41
Be Smart

There's No Such Thing As Cold

12th - Higher Ed
You've felt cold before. Sometimes it's cold outside. But what if I told you that "cold" isn't real? There's no substance or quantity called "cold" in science. We can't measure the amount of "cold" in something. Instead it's about what's...
Instructional Video4:12
SciShow

World's Most Asked Questions Ten of YOUR Most Asked Questions!

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow answers ten of the most asked questions by YOU, our viewers, in the past month -- from “What is new car smell?” to “What would happen if you drilled a hole through the planet?”
Instructional Video5:09
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What are gravitational waves? - Amber L. Stuver

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In September 2015, scientists witnessed something never seen before: two black holes colliding. Both about 30 times as big as our Sun, they had been orbiting each other for millions of years. A fraction of a second before the crash, they...
Instructional Video14:49
TED Talks

How theater weathers wars, outlasts empires and survives pandemics | Cara Greene Epstein

12th - Higher Ed
When catastrophe strikes, art prevails -- and has done so for centuries. In this fascinating talk, writer and director Cara Greene Epstein places the closing of theaters during the coronavirus pandemic in a historical context, exploring...
Instructional Video13:48
TED Talks

Katharine Wilkinson: How empowering women and girls can help stop global warming

12th - Higher Ed
If we really want to address climate change, we need to make gender equity a reality, says writer and environmentalist Katharine Wilkinson. As part of Project Drawdown, Wilkinson has helped scour humanity's wisdom for solutions to draw...
Instructional Video14:10
TED Talks

TED: Fashion and creativity - Isaac Mizrahi

12th - Higher Ed
Fashion designer Isaac Mizrahi spins through a dizzying array of inspirations -- from '50s pinups to a fleeting glimpse of a woman on the street who makes him shout "Stop the cab!" Inside this rambling talk are real clues to living a...
Instructional Video15:00
TED Talks

Ariel Garten: Know thyself, with a brain scanner

12th - Higher Ed
Imagine playing a video game controlled by your mind. Now imagine that game also teaches you about your own patterns of stress, relaxation and focus. Ariel Garten shows how looking at our own brain activity gives new meaning to the...
Instructional Video4:24
SciShow

Why Do We Go All In on Lost Causes?

12th - Higher Ed
We've all experienced the sunk cost fallacy: when you are deep into a task and tell yourself that you’ve come this far, so you may as well finish it. We do this even if it's no longer logical to finish. So why do we do it?
Instructional Video6:15
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The cockroach beatbox - Greg Gage

Pre-K - Higher Ed
By dissecting a cockroach ... yes, live on stage ... TED Fellow and neuroscientist Greg Gage shows how brains receive and deliver electric impulses -- and how legs can respond. (Launching a series on Awesome Nature) "The Cockroach...
Instructional Video5:30
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do you want to squeeze cute things? | Joshua Paul Dale

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Watching a kitten fumbling around, it might feel as if you've never encountered anything so devastatingly adorable in your mortal life. You may want to pet its soft fur and kiss its tiny head. But you may also feel the conflicting...
Instructional Video15:17
TED Talks

TED: A better way to talk about love | Mandy Len Catron

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. In love, we fall. We're struck, we're crushed, we swoon. We burn with passion. Love makes us crazy and makes us...
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 Video4:00
SciShow

Why Do We Kiss?

12th - Higher Ed
Hank gets all up in your face about kissing -- where does it come from, why do it we do it, and do other animals do it? From ancient India to that date you were on last night (which we won't tell anyone about if you won't), we explore...