Instructional Video5:52
SciShow

Do Spicy Food Lovers Live Longer?

12th - Higher Ed
Spicy food is delicious, but how does it affect our health?
Instructional Video2:35
SciShow

How Close Are We to Building Force Fields?

12th - Higher Ed
Sci-fi technology is often more fiction than science, but it turns out there are actually some real-world labs that are working on developing force fields!
Instructional Video2:36
SciShow

Does Milk Make You Phlegmy?

12th - Higher Ed
It’s become a common belief worldwide that gulping down a glass of milk will make you phlegmy. But... there seems to be no real scientific evidence to back up that claim.
Instructional Video5:26
SciShow

Antimatter Light Spectrum Discovered!

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists were able to measure the emission lines of antimatter! And we may have some new clues about how dinosaurs lost their teeth on the way to becoming birds.
Instructional Video6:57
SciShow

When Will We All Die The Statistics of Human Extinction

12th - Higher Ed
We humans like to think we’re special in basically all ways, but if the history of life is any indication, our species has a limited time on this planet. So the question is: when are we gonna go extinct?
Instructional Video10:32
SciShow

How Much Junk Is in Your DNA Trunk?

12th - Higher Ed
The human genome is 3.2 billion base pairs long and contains around 20,000 genes, but how much of that is garbage?
Instructional Video4:42
PBS

There's No Such Thing as Online?!?

12th - Higher Ed
From Facebook to bank accounts, you always have some sort of online presence, whether you're actively engaging in front of a screen or not. Yet this is still a word we use to describe our engagement with the Internet. So we have to ask,...
Instructional Video12:28
TED Talks

Hamish Jolly: A shark-deterrent wetsuit (and it's not what you think)

12th - Higher Ed
Hamish Jolly, an ocean swimmer in Australia, wanted a wetsuit that would deter a curious shark from mistaking him for a potential source of nourishment. (Which, statistically, is rare, but certainly a fate worth avoiding.) Working with a...
Instructional Video17:13
TED Talks

TED: Why I fell in love with monster prime numbers | Adam Spencer

12th - Higher Ed
They're millions of digits long, and it takes an army of mathematicians and machines to hunt them down -- what's not to love about monster primes? Adam Spencer, comedian and lifelong math geek, shares his passion for these odd numbers,...
Instructional Video6:13
TED Talks

Hod Lipson: Building "self-aware" robots

12th - Higher Ed
Hod Lipson demonstrates a few of his cool little robots, which have the ability to learn, understand themselves and even self-replicate.
Instructional Video20:01
TED Talks

Jimmy Wales: The birth of Wikipedia

12th - Higher Ed
Jimmy Wales recalls how he assembled "a ragtag band of volunteers," gave them tools for collaborating and created Wikipedia, the self-organizing, self-correcting, never-finished online encyclopedia.
Instructional Video22:18
SciShow

Neurology, Pharmacology, & Poultry | SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Dr. Genevieve Lind explains how she uses frog eggs to learn how drugs affect receptors in the brain and Jessi's chicken Goldie shows us one use for the cloaca.
Instructional Video3:18
PBS

Are LOLCats and Internet Memes Art?

12th - Higher Ed
We've all seen and shared a few LOLCats and Internet Memes in our time, but is it possible that these images and videos are actually a new form of art? Idea Channel takes a closer look at how memes function in our new interconnected...
Instructional Video15:39
TED Talks

Ajit Narayanan: A word game to communicate in any language

12th - Higher Ed
While working with kids who have trouble speaking, Ajit Narayanan sketched out a way to think about language in pictures, to relate words and concepts in "maps." The idea now powers the FreeSpeech app, which can help nonverbal people...
Instructional Video3:06
MinutePhysics

What Is The Shape of Space? (ft. PhD Comics)

12th - Higher Ed
A collaboration with Jorge Cham and Daniel Whiteson, check out "We Have No Idea" at http://www.wehavenoidea.com Jorge's PhDComics: http://www.phdcomics.com This video is about the local and global geometry and curvature of space and...
Instructional Video5:51
SciShow

Scientists May Have Found a Way to Treat All Cancers... By Accident | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
A universal cure for cancer would be a truly historic achievement in medicine, and it seems that scientists may have found it... by accident.
Instructional Video4:44
SciShow

Why Just Smiling Could Make You Feel Happier

12th - Higher Ed
Being happy makes you smile, but that might just work the other way around, too.
Instructional Video5:12
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How does chemotherapy work? | Hyunsoo Joshua No

Pre-K - Higher Ed
During World War I, scientists were trying to develop an antidote to the poisonous yellow cloud known as mustard gas. They discovered the gas was irrevocably damaging the bone marrow of affected soldiers. This gave the scientists an...
Instructional Video10:29
Bozeman Science

Viral Replication

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how viruses reproduce using the lytic cycle. He also shows how viruses can pick up new genetic material and how retroviruses (like HIV) can enter into the lytic cycle. He also describes the lysogenic cycle and how...
Instructional Video5:09
SciShow

Meet the Sea Dragon: The Biggest Rocket Ever Designed

12th - Higher Ed
The 1960s were an optimistic time for space exploration - so much so that a team designed a rocket called the Sea Dragon that was big enough to launch an entire space station from the sea in one go!
Instructional Video18:37
TED Talks

TED: The moral roots of liberals and conservatives | Jonathan Haidt

12th - Higher Ed
Psychologist Jonathan Haidt studies the five moral values that form the basis of our political choices, whether we're left, right or center. In this eye-opening talk, he pinpoints the moral values that liberals and conservatives tend to...
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow Kids

Which Hand Is Stronger? Biology for Kids

K - 5th
Have you ever tried to write or color with both hands at the same time? It seems like it would save a ton of time, right? But for most people, one of their hands is way better at drawing or writing than the other!
Instructional Video4:15
SciShow

3 Chemistry Experiments That Changed the World

12th - Higher Ed
Chemistry is the study of matter - stuff, and how it interacts with other stuff. Even though chemistry doesn't make a lot of news these days, chemists are making discoveries that change lives all the time. If Hank had to narrow down all...
Instructional Video10:29
TED Talks

TED: A vision of sustainable housing for all of humanity | Vishaan Chakrabarti

12th - Higher Ed
By 2100, the UN estimates that the world's population will grow to just over 11 billion people. Architect Vishaan Chakrabarti wants us to start thinking about how we'll house all these people -- and how new construction can fight climate...