Instructional Video3:26
TED Talks

Richard St. John: 8 secrets of success

12th - Higher Ed
Why do people succeed? Is it because they're smart? Or are they just lucky? Neither. Analyst Richard St. John condenses years of interviews into an unmissable 3-minute slideshow on the real secrets of success.
Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

Scientists Just Transferred Memories... Between Sea Slugs

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists were able to transfer a specific memory from one sea slug to another! And research suggests that focusing on your breathing could help you focus on other things as well!
Instructional Video10:31
TED Talks

TED: Why the best hire might not have the perfect resume | Regina Hartley

12th - Higher Ed
Given the choice between a job candidate with a perfect resume and one who has fought through difficulty, human resources executive Regina Hartley always gives the "Scrapper" a chance. As someone who grew up with adversity, Hartley knows...
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow Kids

Why Do We Yawn?

K - 5th
We yawn a lot when we're tired or warm, and sometimes we even yawn just because we see other people yawning! But why do we yawn in the first place?
Instructional Video14:48
TED Talks

Dana Kanze: The real reason female entrepreneurs get less funding

12th - Higher Ed
Women own 39 percent of all businesses in the US, but female entrepreneurs get only two percent of venture funding. What's causing this gap? Dana Kanze shares research suggesting that it might be the types of questions start-up founders...
Instructional Video1:55
MinuteEarth

Smartphones: A New Model for Energy Efficiency?

12th - Higher Ed
The way smartphones made many devices nonessential is a model for a new way to think about improving energy efficiency.
Instructional Video3:27
SciShow

How Birds Really See the World

12th - Higher Ed
Ever wonder what it looks like from a birds-eye-view? Hank explains they see more than you think!
Instructional Video12:06
TED Talks

Mick Mountz: What happens inside those massive warehouses?

12th - Higher Ed
We make millions of online purchases daily, but who (or what) actually puts our items into packages? In this talk, Mick Mountz weaves a fascinating, surprisingly robot-filled tale of what happens inside a warehouse.
Instructional Video4:58
SciShow

Why Multitask While Driving Isn't a Good Idea

12th - Higher Ed
Driving can be dangerous, especially if you’re trying to juggle a variety of distractions while barreling down a busy highway. So scientists are looking into ways to keep us focused on the task at hand, even if you’re traveling in an...
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

What If We Killed All the Mosquitoes?

12th - Higher Ed
With the Zika virus in the news, some people have wondered why we don't just kill them ALL.
Instructional Video4:18
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How to stay calm under pressure - Noa Kageyama and Pen-Pen Chen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Your favorite athlete closes in for a win; the crowd holds its breath, and at the crucial moment ... she misses the shot. That competitor just experienced the phenomenon known as "choking," where despite months, even years, of practice,...
Instructional Video1:45
SciShow

Does the Camera Really Add Ten Pounds?

12th - Higher Ed
Your friend just tagged you in 17 photos on Facebook but you swear those photos lie about your weight. Is the camera playing tricks with your eyes?
Instructional Video9:07
TED Talks

TED: The link between sex and imagination | Gina Gutierrez

12th - Higher Ed
Sex is as much mental as it is physical -- and imagination is the most powerful tool we have to expand our personal agency and capacity for pleasure, says sexual wellness storyteller Gina Gutierrez. The founder of audio-erotica company...
Instructional Video8:22
Crash Course

Environmental Econ: Crash Course Economics

12th - Higher Ed
So, if economics is about choices and how we use our resources, econ probably has a lot to say about the environment, right? Right! In simple terms, pollution is just a market failure. The market is producing more pollution than society...
Instructional Video13:30
TED Talks

TED: Dear Facebook, this is how you're breaking democracy | Yaël Eisenstat

12th - Higher Ed
Lies are more engaging online than truth, says former CIA analyst, diplomat and Facebook employee Yaël Eisenstat. "As long as [social media] algorithms' goals are to keep us engaged, they will feed us the poison that plays to our worst...
Instructional Video2:57
SciShow

Why Curveballs Are in the Eye of the Beholder

12th - Higher Ed
In baseball, a curveball can be pretty hard for a batter to hit. And it turns out the reason why might have more to do with the batter's eyes than the pitcher's arm!
Instructional Video10:00
TED Talks

Nicola Sturgeon: Why governments should prioritize well-being

12th - Higher Ed
In 2018, Scotland, Iceland and New Zealand established the network of Wellbeing Economy Governments to challenge the acceptance of GDP as the ultimate measure of a country's success. In this visionary talk, First Minister of Scotland...
Instructional Video7:47
TED Talks

TED: Did the global response to 9/11 make us safer? | Benedetta Berti

12th - Higher Ed
If we want sustainable, long-term security to be the norm in the world, it's time to radically rethink how we can achieve it, says TED Fellow and conflict researcher Benedetta Berti. In an eye-opening talk, Berti explains how building a...
Instructional Video3:51
SciShow

Why Does Squinting Help You See Better?

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever tried to make out something that was really far away, odds are you squinted while doing it. It's basically involuntary! But does narrowing your field of vision really help you see things better?
Instructional Video6:34
TED Talks

Munir Virani: Why I love vultures

12th - Higher Ed
As natural garbage collectors, vultures are vital to our ecosystem -- so why all the bad press? Why are so many in danger of extinction? Raptor biologist Munir Virani says we need to pay more attention to these unique and misunderstood...
Instructional Video13:43
TED Talks

Woody Norris: Hypersonic sound and other inventions

12th - Higher Ed
Woody Norris shows off two of his inventions that use sound in new ways, including the Long Range Acoustic Device, or LRAD. He talks about his untraditional approach to inventing and education, because, as he puts it: "Almost nothing has...
Instructional Video11:37
TED Talks

Sarah Lewis: Embrace the near win

12th - Higher Ed
At her first museum job, art historian Sarah Lewis noticed something important about an artist she was studying: Not every artwork was a total masterpiece. She asks us to consider the role of the almost-failure, the near win, in our own...
Instructional Video15:09
TED Talks

TED: The global learning crisis -- and what to do about it | Amel Karboul

12th - Higher Ed
The most important infrastructure we have is educated minds, says former Tunisian government minister Amel Karboul. Yet too often large investments go to more visible initiatives such as bridges and roads, when it's the minds of our...
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

Will there be a ring in Mars's future?

12th - Higher Ed
Will Mars have a ring around it? Hank Green explains in this episode of Scishow Space News!