Instructional Video3:45
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The paradox of value - Akshita Agarwal

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Imagine you're on a game show and you can choose between two prizes: a diamond - or a bottle of water. It's an easy choice _ the diamonds are more valuable. But if given the same choice when you were dehydrated in the desert, after...
Instructional Video3:25
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Network theory - Marc Samet

Pre-K - Higher Ed
From social media to massive financial institutions, we live within a web of networks. But how do they work? How does Googling a single word provide millions of results? Marc Samet investigates how these networks keep us connected and...
Instructional Video4:22
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Will the ocean ever run out of fish? - Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and Jennifer Jacquet

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When most people think of fishing, we imagine relaxing in a boat and patiently reeling in the day's catch. But modern industrial fishing -- the kind that stocks our grocery shelves -- looks more like warfare. Ayana Elizabeth Johnson and...
Instructional Video4:57
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How to turn protest into powerful change - Eric Liu

Pre-K - Higher Ed
We live in an age of protest. On campuses, in public squares, on streets and social media, protestors around the world are challenging the status quo. But while protest is often necessary, is it sufficient? Eric Liu outlines three...
Instructional Video4:17
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What causes economic bubbles? - Prateek Singh

Pre-K - Higher Ed
During the 1600's, the exotic tulip became a nationwide sensation; some single bulbs even sold for ten times the yearly salary of a skilled craftsman. Suddenly, though, the demand completely plummeted, leaving the tulip market in a...
Instructional Video5:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What does it mean to be a refugee? - Benedetta Berti and Evelien Borgman

Pre-K - Higher Ed
About 60 million people around the globe have been forced to leave their homes to escape war, violence and persecution. The majority have become Internally Displaced Persons, meaning they fled their homes but are still in their own...
Instructional Video4:35
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How people rationalize fraud - Kelly Richmond Pope

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you ask people whether they think stealing is wrong, most of them would answer yes. And yet, in 2013, organizations all over the world lost an estimated total of $3.7 trillion to fraud. Kelly Richmond Pope explains how the fraud...
Instructional Video3:46
TED-Ed

TED-ED: History through the eyes of the potato - Leo Bear-McGuinness

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Baked or fried, boiled or roasted, as chips or fries; at some point in your life you've probably eaten a potato. But potatoes have played a much more significant role in our history than just that of the dietary staple we have come to...
Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How does money laundering work? - Delena D. Spann

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Money laundering is the term for any process that "cleans" illegally obtained funds of their "dirty" criminal origins, allowing them to be used within the legal economy. And the practice is about as old as money itself. But how does it...
Instructional Video4:05
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is a gift economy? - Alex Gendler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What if, this holiday season, instead of saying "thank you" to your aunt for her gift of a knitted sweater, the polite response expected from you was to show up at her house in a week with a better gift? Or to vote for her in the town...
Instructional Video4:34
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Where does gold come from? - David Lunney

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Did you know that gold is extraterrestrial? Instead of arising from our planet's rocky crust, it was actually cooked up in space and is present on Earth because of cataclysmic stellar explosions called supernovae. CERN Scientist David...
Instructional Video3:54
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Mansa Musa, one of the wealthiest people who ever lived - Jessica Smith

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Mansa Musa, the 14th century African king of the Mali Empire, is said to have amassed a fortune that possibly made him one of the wealthiest people who ever lived. Jessica Smith tells the story of how Mansa Musa literally put his empire...
Instructional Video4:35
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The history of chocolate - Deanna Pucciarelli

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you can't imagine life without chocolate, you're lucky you weren't born before the 16th century. Until then, chocolate only existed as a bitter, foamy drink in Mesoamerica. So how did we get from a bitter beverage to the chocolate...
Instructional Video5:25
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The life cycle of a t-shirt - Angel Chang

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Consider the classic white t-shirt. Annually, we sell and buy 2 billion t-shirts globally, making it one of the most common garments in the world. But how and where is the average t-shirt made, and what's its environmental impact? Angel...
Instructional Video2:54
Curated Video

Building the Panama Canal

9th - Higher Ed
The Panama Canal is a vital trade route linking the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Its fascinating story goes back hundreds of years.
Instructional Video2:54
Curated Video

Building the Panama Canal

9th - Higher Ed
The Panama Canal is a vital trade route linking the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. The story of its creations goes back hundreds of years.
News Clip3:01
Bloomberg

U.S.-China Economic Swap Worries Emerging Markets

Higher Ed
Dec. 17 -- Bloomberg's Simon Kennedy and Scarlet Fu examine the role reversal of the U.S. and Chinese economies. They speak in ""On The Markets"" on ""In The Loop.""