Instructional Video2:37
MinuteEarth

Epigenetics: Why Inheritance Is Weirder Than We Thought

12th - Higher Ed
Epigenetics: Why Inheritance Is Weirder Than We Thought
Instructional Video20:42
TED Talks

TED: Ideas change everything — and what's next for TED | Chris Anderson and Monique Ruff-Bell

12th - Higher Ed
TED is on a mission to discover and champion the ideas that will shape tomorrow. Reflecting on the evolution of that mission, TED's Chris Anderson and Monique Ruff-Bell cast a visionary gaze on the organization's future — including a...
Instructional Video11:48
TED Talks

TED: What's the point of digital fashion? | Karinna Grant

12th - Higher Ed
What if you could own more clothes without crowding your closet or growing your carbon footprint? Introducing the dematerialized future of your wardrobe, digital fashion entrepreneur Karinna Grant talks about the brands selling pixelated...
Instructional Video18:11
TED Talks

TED: The power of unconventional thinking | David McWilliams

12th - Higher Ed
From World War I to the 2008 economic collapse and beyond, history shows that economists don't always see the future as clearly as they think they do, says economist David McWilliams. Using the words of W.B. Yeats, McWilliams makes the...
Instructional Video12:52
TED Talks

TED: The world's rarest diseases — and how they impact everyone | Anna Greka

12th - Higher Ed
Physician-scientist Anna Greka investigates the world's rarest genetic diseases, decoding the secrets of our cells through "molecular detective work." She explains how her team is using new, advanced technology to solve decades-old...
Instructional Video7:46
SciShow

Half of All Plants Are Invisible

12th - Higher Ed
If you see an acorn sprout under an oak tree, you're seeing that tree's grandchild. Here's why half of all higher plants are invisible, and why it works for them.
Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

How People Have Evolved to Live in the Clouds

12th - Higher Ed
High elevations can be a problem for humans. Since the air is thinner, you get less oxygen with every breath, leading to all kinds of negative side effects. But there are millions of people around the world who spend their whole lives at...
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

Cephalopods Have a Totally Wild Way of Adapting

12th - Higher Ed
With their squishy bodies and color-changing abilities, octopuses and other cephalopods already look like our planet’s resident aliens. But researchers have discovered yet another thing that separates them from most other animals on...
Instructional Video8:06
SciShow

How 5G Cell Service Could Hurt Weather Forecasts

12th - Higher Ed
Good weather forecasts save lives, but scientists are worried that 5G transmissions could drown out frequencies measured by weather satellites, setting weather forecasts back decades.
Instructional Video5:12
SciShow

Mendel Got Extremely Lucky (...or Maybe He Lied)

12th - Higher Ed
Science, while often the result of a stroke of genius, can just as easily be a stroke of extraordinarily good luck. Mendel’s work just happened to be a mix of the two.
Instructional Video5:46
SciShow

You Can Inherit Mitochondrial DNA from Both Parents! | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Earlier this week, a team of researchers announced that they’d made a discovery about how we inherit mitochondrial DNA from our parents that could change what we know about not only disease inheritance, but human history as a whole.
Instructional Video5:03
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you outsmart Fate and break her ancient curse? | Dan Finkel

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Hundreds of years ago, your ancestor stole a magical tarot deck from Fate herself— and it came with a terrible cost. Once every 23 years, one member of your family must face Fate in a duel with rules only known to your opponent. And...
News Clip7:39
PBS

New book ‘The Aftermath’ examines the political influence and legacy of the baby boomers

12th - Higher Ed
The impact of the baby boom generation is impossible to ignore. The roughly 76 million people born between 1946 and 1964 have reshaped American society at each stage of their lives. Philip Bump of The Washington Post takes a closer look...
News Clip5:36
PBS

National parks turn into classrooms for a new generation

12th - Higher Ed
At the Muir Woods National Monument just north of San Francisco, students learning by seeing, touching and smelling. The education program is administered by the National Park Service in an attempt to expose the next generation to the...
News Clip7:20
PBS

For these college students, the most difficult test is basic survival

12th - Higher Ed
The biggest challenge for these college students may not be exams or papers, but finding the means to survive. While the University of California system has worked to bring in more first-generation and "non-traditional" students, helping...
News Clip4:11
Curated Video

Inauguration of President Richard M Nixon 1973, Part 11

Higher Ed
Swearing -in and Inauguration of President Richard M Nixon Washington DC January 1973 from Nixon Presidential Materials- National Archives
News Clip2:45
Curated Video

Winchester gun factory to close after 140 years

Higher Ed
1. Wooster Mountain Gun Club in Danbury, Connecticut 2. Man shooting a Winchester rifle 3. Dean Price, Gun Collector, demonstrating how he fires a Winchester rifle 4. Price demonstrating how he loads rounds into the chamber 5....
News Clip17:25
PBS

Civil Rights Pioneer Ruby Bridges On Activism In The Modern Era

12th - Higher Ed
In the 1960s, Ruby Bridges became the first African-American student to integrate into an entirely white public school system in New Orleans. She joins Charlayne Hunter-Gault, who followed in Bridges' footsteps 60 years ago and...
News Clip2:03
PBS

Why You Should Be Proud Of Your Ethnic Name

12th - Higher Ed
Filmed before the Georgia shootings, writer Te-Ping Chen shares with us her "Humble Opinion" that people with ethic names must embrace them instead of shying away. Chen, who says she was given a "boy's name" at birth, looks back on how...
Instructional Video5:20
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Five fingers of evolution - Paul Andersen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How can a "thumbs up" sign help us remember five processes that impact evolution? The story of the Five Fingers of Evolution gives us a clever way of understanding change in gene pools over time.
Instructional Video13:27
TED Talks

TED: The leaders who ruined Africa, and the generation who can fix it | Fred Swaniker

12th - Higher Ed
Before he hit eighteen, Fred Swaniker had lived in Ghana, Gambia, Botswana and Zimbabwe. What he learned from a childhood across Africa was that while good leaders can't make much of a difference in societies with strong institutions, in...
Instructional Video10:29
TED Talks

TED: How the new generation of Latinx voters could change US elections | María Teresa Kumar

12th - Higher Ed
A historic number of Latinx voters participated in the 2020 US presidential election, including a record number of young people casting their ballots for the first time. Civic leader María Teresa Kumar takes a look at the issues closest...
Instructional Video6:36
TED Talks

TED: 5 needs that any COVID-19 response should meet | Kwame Owusu-Kesse

12th - Higher Ed
Crisis interventions often focus on a single aspect of a big, complicated problem, failing to address the broader social and economic context. Kwame Owusu-Kesse describes how the Harlem Children's Zone is taking a more holistic approach...