Instructional Video15:14
TED Talks

Arthur Benjamin: A performance of "Mathemagic"

12th - Higher Ed
In a lively show, mathemagician Arthur Benjamin races a team of calculators to figure out 3-digit squares, solves another massive mental equation and guesses a few birthdays. How does he do it? He’ll tell you.
Instructional Video11:12
TED Talks

Peter Molyneux: Meet Milo, the virtual boy

12th - Higher Ed
Peter Molyneux demos Milo, a hotly anticipated video game for Microsoft's Kinect controller. Perceptive and impressionable like a real 11-year-old, the virtual boy watches, listens and learns -- recognizing and responding to you.
Instructional Video12:36
TED Talks

TED: How we can face the future without fear, together | Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks

12th - Higher Ed
It's a fateful moment in history. We've seen divisive elections, divided societies and the growth of extremism -- all fueled by anxiety and uncertainty. "Is there something we can do, each of us, to be able to face the future without...
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

How Do You Trace a Meteorite Back To Its Home?

12th - Higher Ed
It's virtually impossible to tell where a meteorite comes from, but in 2018, scientists were able to pull a feat of forensic astronomy and do just that.
Instructional Video8:08
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Patterns - Level 6 - Causal Patterns

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on causal patterns. TERMS Patterns - regularity in the world Cause - a thing that gives rise to an event Effect - an event Relationships - interconnection between...
Instructional Video5:52
TED Talks

TED: Greg Gage: How to control someone else's arm with your brain

12th - Higher Ed
Greg Gage is on a mission to make brain science accessible to all. In this fun, kind of creepy demo, the neuroscientist and TED Senior Fellow uses a simple, inexpensive DIY kit to take away the free will of an audience member. It's not a...
Instructional Video9:12
TED Talks

Hans Rosling: The magic washing machine

12th - Higher Ed
What was the greatest invention of the industrial revolution? Hans Rosling makes the case for the washing machine. With newly designed graphics from Gapminder, Rosling shows us the magic that pops up when economic growth and electricity...
Instructional Video18:37
TED Talks

Seth Shostak: ET is (probably) out there -- get ready

12th - Higher Ed
SETI researcher Seth Shostak bets that we will find extraterrestrial life in the next twenty-four years, or he'll buy you a cup of coffee. He explains why new technologies and the laws of probability make the breakthrough so likely --...
Instructional Video12:01
TED Talks

Fabian Oefner: Psychedelic science

12th - Higher Ed
Swiss artist and photographer Fabian Oefner is on a mission to make eye-catching art from everyday science. In this charming talk, he shows off some recent psychedelic images, including photographs of crystals as they interact with...
Instructional Video3:01
MinuteEarth

Why It's Good To Have A Weak Hand

12th - Higher Ed
We might have a strong hand because having a weak hand is actually useful.
Instructional Video13:28
TED Talks

TED: What really motivates people to be honest in business | Alexander Wagner

12th - Higher Ed
each year, one in seven large corporations commits fraud. Why? To find out, Alexander Wagner takes us inside the economics, ethics and psychology of doing the right thing. Join him for an introspective journey down the slippery slopes of...
Instructional Video5:52
TED Talks

Greg Gage: How to control someone else's arm with your brain

12th - Higher Ed
Greg Gage is on a mission to make brain science accessible to all. In this fun, kind of creepy demo, the neuroscientist and TED Senior Fellow uses a simple, inexpensive DIY kit to take away the free will of an audience member. It's not a...
Instructional Video3:35
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: If superpowers were real: Super strength - Joy Lin

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What if super strength wasn't just the stuff of epic comic book stories? Is it scientifically possible to be super strong? In this series, Joy Lin tackles six superpowers and reveals just how scientifically realistic they can be to us...
Instructional Video5:38
SciShow

We Don't Actually Know Where the Sun Came From

12th - Higher Ed
We can’t find evidence of the Sun’s family, or how it might have formed, but we do have some pretty good theories.
Instructional Video5:12
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do hard drives work? - Kanawat Senanan

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The modern hard drive is an object that can likely hold more information than your local library. But how does it store so much information in such a small space? Kanawat Senanan details the generations of engineers, material scientists,...
Instructional Video13:11
TED Talks

TED: A magical search for a coincidence | Helder Guimarães

12th - Higher Ed
Small coincidences. They happen all the time and yet, they pass us by because we are not looking for them. In a delightfully subtle trick, magician Helder Guimarães demonstrates with a deck of cards, a dollar bill and a stuffed giraffe.
Instructional Video13:36
TED Talks

TED: The debut of the British Paraorchestra | Charles Hazlewood + British Paraorchestra

12th - Higher Ed
There are millions of prodigiously gifted musicians of disability around the world, and Charles Hazlewood is determined to give them a platform. Watch the debut performance of the British Paraorchestra.
Instructional Video12:21
TED Talks

TED: A practical way to help the homeless find work and safety | Richard J. Berry

12th - Higher Ed
When Richard J. Berry, the mayor of Albuquerque, saw a man on a street corner holding a cardboard sign that read "Want a job," he decided to take him (and others in his situation) up on it. He and his staff started a citywide initiative...
Instructional Video10:27
TED Talks

Nathaniel Kahn: Scenes from "My Architect"

12th - Higher Ed
Nathaniel Kahn shares clips from his documentary "My Architect," about his quest to understand his father, the legendary architect Louis Kahn. It's a film with meaning to anyone who seeks to understand the relationship between art and love.
Instructional Video14:28
TED Talks

Alan Eustace: I leapt from the stratosphere. Here's how I did it

12th - Higher Ed
On October 24, 2014, Alan Eustace donned a custom-built, 235-pound spacesuit, attached himself to a weather balloon, and rose above 135,000 feet, from which point he dove to Earth, breaking both the sound barrier and previous records for...
Instructional Video2:51
SciShow

How Can a Saw Know What It’s Cutting?

12th - Higher Ed
Table saws, while quite useful for woodworking, are also dangerous machines, which is why some incredible safety mechanisms have been invented to help you remain one with your body parts.
Instructional Video6:16
TED Talks

TED: How I became part sea urchin | Catherine Mohr

12th - Higher Ed
As a young scientist, Catherine Mohr was on her dream scuba trip -- when she put her hand right down on a spiny sea urchin. While a school of sharks circled above. What happened next? More than you can possibly imagine. Settle in for...
Instructional Video32:12
TED Talks

Evelyn Glennie: How to truly listen

12th - Higher Ed
In this soaring demonstration, deaf percussionist Evelyn Glennie illustrates how listening to music involves much more than simply letting sound waves hit your eardrums.
Instructional Video5:32
TED Talks

TED: How a penny made me feel like a millionaire | Tania Luna

12th - Higher Ed
As a young child, Tania Luna left her home in post-Chernobyl Ukraine to take asylum in the US. And one day, on the floor of the New York homeless shelter where she and her family lived, she found a penny. She has never again felt so...