Instructional Video8:18
TED Talks

Skylar Tibbits: The emergence of "4D printing"

12th - Higher Ed
3D printing has grown in sophistication since the late 1970s; TED Fellow Skylar Tibbits is shaping the next development, which he calls 4D printing, where the fourth dimension is time. This emerging technology will allow us to print...
Instructional Video5:42
SciShow

When Sex Makes You Sick Post Orgasmic Illness Syndrome

12th - Higher Ed
Generally speaking, orgasms are pretty wonderful. But for some, they can be literally sickening.
Instructional Video5:03
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Making a TED-Ed Lesson: Visualizing complex ideas

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How can animation convey complex, intangible concepts? A visual metaphor, or an idea represented through imagery, can take an idea as massive as Big Data and tie it to the familiar depiction of a growing tree. TED-Ed animators explain...
Instructional Video3:48
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What's the best country to live in? | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What's the best country to live in? Is it the one with the best food? The longest life expectancy? The best weather? For the past 70 years, most governments have relied heavily on a single number: the Gross Domestic Product, or GDP. But...
Instructional Video6:24
SciShow

3 Bizarre Projects That Could Transform Exploration - NIAC 2019

12th - Higher Ed
Every amazing mission you know about today started off as just an idea, and some of 2019’s early phase NIAC concepts could mean big things for our future.
Instructional Video6:02
SciShow

Dark Matter May Have Come Before the Big Bang! SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
A new study provides mathematical evidence that dark matter could be much older than we thought and we've found a weird glitch in a neutron star.
Instructional Video5:02
Bozeman Science

Aposematic Coloration

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how aposematic coloration (or warning coloration) is used for protection in the natural world. He explains how bright colors can be caused by either sexual selection or a warning coloration to predators. He also...
Instructional Video5:16
SciShow

Why Does Crying Make You Feel Better?

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever wondered why you feel better after a good, hearty sob? Well, it turns out the reasons are kind of a mystery, and they range from social support to brain temperature.
Instructional Video14:58
TED Talks

TED: Our unhealthy obsession with choice | Renata Salecl

12th - Higher Ed
We face an endless string of choices, which leads us to feel anxiety, guilt and pangs of inadequacy that we are perhaps making the wrong ones. But philosopher Renata Salecl asks: Could individual choices be distracting us from something...
Instructional Video7:35
TED Talks

TED: Should you donate differently? | Joy Sun

12th - Higher Ed
Technology allows us to give cash directly to the poorest people on the planet. Should we do it? In this thought-provoking talk, veteran aid worker Joy Sun explores two ways to help the poor.
Instructional Video33:33
SciShow

Was the Apollo Program a Bad Idea A SciShow Documentary

12th - Higher Ed
The Apollo program was famous for being risky and expensive. It had a crunched timeline, daring astronauts, and lacked modern tech, and that all kind of makes you wonder… was the Apollo program a bad idea?
Instructional Video15:46
TED Talks

Zach Kaplan + Keith Schacht: Toys and materials from the future

12th - Higher Ed
The Inventables guys, Zach Kaplan and Keith Schacht, demo some amazing new materials and how we might use them. Look for squishy magnets, odor-detecting ink, "dry" liquid and a very surprising 10-foot pole.
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

Do Black Holes Have Quantum Hair?

12th - Higher Ed
We don’t know what happens to stuff when it gets sucked into a black hole, but in the same instance, we don’t know what happens to the black hole. There’s a possibility that sucked up stuff might actually give the black hole “quantum hair”.
Instructional Video11:41
TED Talks

TED: The case for a 4-day work week | Juliet Schor

12th - Higher Ed
The traditional approach to work needs a redesign, says economist Juliet Schor. She's leading four-day work week trials in countries like the US and Ireland, and the results so far have been overwhelmingly positive: from increased...
Instructional Video6:26
SciShow

Quantum Supremacy: When Will Quantum Computers Be a Thing?

12th - Higher Ed
In 2019, Google announced that they had achieved quantum supremacy - but what does that mean? And does it even matter?
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

When Insomnia Becomes Deadly

12th - Higher Ed
For most people, insomnia won't kill you. But in one very rare, very specific case, not only is it deadly, it's lurking in your genes.
Instructional Video4:29
PBS

Do We Want the World to End?

12th - Higher Ed
The so-called Mayan long count calendar predication of the apocalypse is based a fundamental MISUNDERSTANDING of Mayan calendars and society. It's so far off base that scientific and anthropological experts can dismiss it with laugh....
Instructional Video15:34
TED Talks

Jeff Skoll: My journey into movies that matter

12th - Higher Ed
Film producer Jeff Skoll (An Inconvenient Truth) talks about his film company, Participant Productions, and the people who've inspired him to do good.
Instructional Video17:35
TED Talks

TED: 3 principles for creating safer AI | Stuart Russell

12th - Higher Ed
How can we harness the power of superintelligent AI while also preventing the catastrophe of robotic takeover? As we move closer toward creating all-knowing machines, AI pioneer Stuart Russell is working on something a bit different:...
Instructional Video6:57
SciShow

How to Forget Things on Purpose

12th - Higher Ed
If you had the power to forget, would you do it? Michael Aranda explains how this might be possible in this episode of SciShow.
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

Could We Build Weather-Controlling Satellites?

12th - Higher Ed
In some science fiction movies, satellites control the weather in disastrous, but effective ways. Here in reality, we have attempted to influence the weather, with mixed results.
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

How We Used the Moon to Send Radio Messages

12th - Higher Ed
In the early days of the Cold War, it was difficult to send and receive messages across the globe. Before the US launched its first satellite in January 1958, the military tried a creative solution: bouncing radio waves off the Moon.
Instructional Video4:52
SciShow

Earthquakes Probably Won't Destroy Us in 2018

12th - Higher Ed
You may have read that 2018 is looking to be a bad year for earthquakes, but Hank is here to offer you some assurances.
Instructional Video10:08
TED Talks

Ellen Jorgensen: Biohacking -- you can do it, too

12th - Higher Ed
We have personal computing -- why not personal biotech? That's the question biologist Ellen Jorgensen and her colleagues asked themselves before opening Genspace, a nonprofit DIY bio lab in Brooklyn devoted to citizen science, where...