Instructional Video5:42
SciShow

3 Unique Rovers for Extreme Worlds

12th - Higher Ed
Specialized rovers provide all kinds of creative solutions to the problem of navigating new terrain, and future missions might just carry some weird bots like these.
Instructional Video2:58
SciShow

Why Our Brains Love Junk Food

12th - Higher Ed
Hank explains the scientific reasons behind why we humans generally prefer to eat donut hamburgers to carrots.
Instructional Video29:34
SciShow

Ammonite Fossils and Sharp Animals w/Kallie from PBS Eons | SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Talk Show all-star Kallie Moore returns to tell us about the exciting things happening over at Eons, and Jessi stops by with not one but two poke-y guests!
Instructional Video9:12
SciShow

Anal Teeth, Paralyzing Farts, and Other Weaponized Butts

12th - Higher Ed
All animals have adaptations that help them survive in the wild...some just focus more on back-end development than others. Whether for offense, defense, or both, here are five creatures with butt-kicking behinds!
Instructional Video4:50
SciShow

The Most Common Planet in the Universe?

12th - Higher Ed
There’s one kind of planet we’ve found more often than any other in the universe so far: mini-Neptunes. Now, some scientists think they’ve figured out why there are just so many of them.
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

We Might Be Wrong About Planet Formation

12th - Higher Ed
Though we’ve been able detect thousands of exoplanets in the last few decades, we’ve now directly imaged an exoplanet that changes our whole perspective on how we think planets like Jupiter form!
Instructional Video10:31
SciShow

4 Things We've Forgotten How to Make

12th - Higher Ed
Our knowledge of specific technologies or techniques can sometimes be lost to time. And that can be because of changing economic conditions, or, sometimes, it's because the technology was so deadly that only a few were allowed to know it.
Instructional Video3:52
Bozeman Science

What is the HHMI? Why is it amazing?

12th - Higher Ed
I visited the Howard Hughes Medical Institute last week.
Instructional Video3:37
SciShow

How Space Might Have Shaped Our DNA

12th - Higher Ed
The DNA inside our cells almost exclusively twists in one direction, but the reason for this might be out of this world!
Instructional Video6:26
TED Talks

Tom Wujec: 3 ways the brain creates meaning

12th - Higher Ed
Information designer Tom Wujec talks through three areas of the brain that help us understand words, images, feelings, connections. In this short talk from TEDU, he asks: How can we best engage our brains to help us better understand big...
Instructional Video10:04
TED Talks

Kate Orff: Reviving New York's rivers -- with oysters!

12th - Higher Ed
Architect Kate Orff sees the oyster as an agent of urban change. Bundled into beds and sunk into city rivers, oysters slurp up pollution and make legendarily dirty waters clean -- thus driving even more innovation in "oyster-tecture."...
Instructional Video6:24
TED Talks

JR: One year of turning the world inside out

12th - Higher Ed
Street artist JR made a wish in 2011: Join me in a worldwide photo project to show the world its true face. One year after making his TED Prize wish, he shows how giant posters of human faces, pasted in public, are connecting...
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

Will there be a ring in Mars's future?

12th - Higher Ed
Will Mars have a ring around it? Hank Green explains in this episode of Scishow Space News!
Instructional Video7:21
TED Talks

TED: Why we need to fight misinformation about vaccines - Ethan Lindenberger

12th - Higher Ed
Ethan Lindenberger never got vaccinated as a kid. So one day, he went on Reddit and asked a simple question: "Where do I go to get vaccinated?" The post went viral, landing Lindenberger in the middle of a heated debate about vaccination...
Instructional Video9:10
TED Talks

Nate Silver: Does racism affect how you vote?

12th - Higher Ed
Nate Silver has data that answers big questions about race in politics. For instance, in the 2008 presidential race, did Obama's skin color actually keep him from getting votes in some parts of the country? Stats and myths collide in...
Instructional Video14:14
TED Talks

TED: A conservative's plea: Let's work together | Arthur Brooks

12th - Higher Ed
Conservatives and liberals both believe that they alone are motivated by love while their opponents are motivated by hate. How can we solve problems with so much polarization? In this talk, social scientist Arthur Brooks shares ideas for...
Instructional Video16:50
TED Talks

TED: Theranos, whistleblowing and speaking truth to power | Erika Cheung

12th - Higher Ed
In 2014, Erika Cheung made a discovery that would ultimately help bring down her employer, Theranos, as well as its founder, Elizabeth Holmes, who claimed to have invented technology that would transform medicine. The decision to become...
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

MU69 is Flat, and No One Knows Why - SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
MU69 seems to be much flatter than we thought and the Gaia space telescope can tell us where galaxies have been and, maybe, where they're going.
Instructional Video2:48
SciShow Kids

Why Do We Get Goosebumps?

K - 5th
Jessi got so cold outside that she got goosebumps! Join her and Squeaks as they learn what causes your body to make these bumps in the first place.
Instructional Video12:16
SciShow

Talk Show: Brain Injuries & Pearl the Tegu

12th - Higher Ed
Ben Fowlkes joins the Talk Show to talk about mixed martial arts and how it affects the brain and body.
Instructional Video4:42
SciShow

The First Time We Met a Comet, We Blew a Hole in It

12th - Higher Ed
In the first mission of its kind, Deep Impact’s goal was to teach us about the interior of comets...by blowing a hole in the side of one!
Instructional Video11:53
TED Talks

TED: The haunting truth of ghost stories | Coya Paz Brownrigg

12th - Higher Ed
Ghost stories reveal much more than the ghouls and spirits that haunt them. Settle in for a spooky delight as theater educator Coya Paz Brownrigg lays out three types of bone-chilling tales and exhumes the grave truths they hold about...
Instructional Video16:11
TED Talks

TED: Do you really know why you do what you do? | Petter Johansson

12th - Higher Ed
Experimental psychologist Petter Johansson researches choice blindness -- a phenomenon where we convince ourselves that we're getting what we want, even when we're not. In an eye-opening talk, he shares experiments (designed in...
Instructional Video7:26
TED Talks

TED: How PhotoSynth can connect the world's images | Blaise Agüera y Arcas

12th - Higher Ed
Blaise Aguera y Arcas leads a dazzling demo of Photosynth, software that could transform the way we look at digital images. Using still photos culled from the Web, Photosynth builds breathtaking dreamscapes and lets us navigate them.