Instructional Video4:42
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Are naked mole rats the strangest mammals? - Thomas Park

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What mammal has the social life of an insect, the cold-bloodedness of a reptile, and the metabolism of a plant? Bald and buck-toothed, naked mole rats may not be pretty, but they are extraordinary. Thomas Park explains how mole rats'...
Instructional Video3:32
Be Smart

A Slice of Pizza Science!

12th - Higher Ed
How does math keep a folded slice from drooping? And what does pizza have to do with the speed of light?
Instructional Video9:59
TED Talks

TED: Thorium, an alternative nuclear fuel | Kirk Sorensen

12th - Higher Ed
Kirk Sorensen shows us the liquid fuel thorium reactor -- a way to produce energy that is safer, cleaner and more efficient than current nuclear power.
Instructional Video3:18
SciShow

Pneumatic Tubes: Transportation of the Past... And Future?

12th - Higher Ed
Wouldn't it be nice if our transportation was as sleek as in The Jetsons or Futurama? Flying cars are cool, but what about a giant network of human-sized tubes that run through buildings and across entire cities? Well guess what? The...
Instructional Video6:19
Bozeman Science

Calculating the Gravitational Force

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains why astronauts are weightless. He also explains how Newton's Universal Law of Gravitation can be used to calculate the gravitational force between objects.
Instructional Video1:53
MinuteEarth

The Mystery of The Exploding Appendix

12th - Higher Ed
Rates of appendicitis vary around the world, likely due to the forces of modernization. **Appendix** - There are many other unforeseen health changes that seem to be related to the forces of modernization, like the increase in rates of...
Instructional Video3:07
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Distorting Madonna in Medieval art - James Earle

Pre-K - Higher Ed
After Rome was destroyed, people were wary of attachment to physical beauty. As Christianity gained traction, Romans instead began to focus on the metaphysical beauty of virtue, and art began to follow suit. James Earle discusses how...
Instructional Video7:58
SciShow

5 Gross Gifts Animals Give Their Mates

12th - Higher Ed
We humans might think that flowers are pretty good gifts for a first date, but many insects have their own nuptial gifts, and well, flowers they ain't. Chapters SIX SPOT BURNET MOTHS 0:52 RED VELVET MITE 2:21 GROUND CRICKET 3:45 SCORPION...
Instructional Video18:29
TED Talks

Clay Shirky: How the Internet will (one day) transform government

12th - Higher Ed
The open-source world has learned to deal with a flood of new, oftentimes divergent, ideas using hosting services like GitHub -- so why can’t governments? In this rousing talk Clay Shirky shows how democracies can take a lesson from the...
Instructional Video17:33
TED Talks

TED: The true cost of oil | Garth Lenz

12th - Higher Ed
What does environmental devastation actually look like? At TEDxVictoria, photographer Garth Lenz shares shocking photos of the Alberta Tar Sands mining project -- and the beautiful (and vital) ecosystems under threat.
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is the biggest single-celled organism? - Murry Gans

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The elephant is a creature of epic proportions -- and yet, it owes its enormity to more than 1,000 trillion microscopic cells. And on the epically small end of things, there are likely millions of unicellular species, yet there are very...
Instructional Video4:06
SciShow

The Most Massive Dinosaur, and Are Earthquakes Contagious?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News introduces you to the most massive land animal ever to walk the earth (pretty much) and tells you what’s going on with all of these earthquakes lately.
Instructional Video3:48
SciShow

How Much Data Can Our Brains Store?

12th - Higher Ed
Our brains aren't exactly like a computer's hard drive, but it can still be fun to think about just how much storage space we have in our noggins.
Instructional Video8:48
TED Talks

TED: How the James Webb Space Telescope will unfold the universe | John C. Mather

12th - Higher Ed
The James Webb Space Telescope is a miracle of modern science and engineering. With a 21-foot, gold-coated mirror protected by a sunshield that's the size of a tennis court, it's the world's most powerful telescope and humanity's latest...
Instructional Video14:53
TED Talks

David Epstein: Are athletes really getting faster, better, stronger?

12th - Higher Ed
When you look at sporting achievements over the last decades, it seems like humans have gotten faster, better and stronger in nearly every way. Yet as David Epstein points out in this delightfully counter-intuitive talk, we might want to...
Instructional Video7:23
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Calculating the odds of intelligent alien life - Jill Tarter

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Could there be intelligent life on other planets? This question has piqued imagination and curiosity for decades. Explore the answer with the Drake Equation -- a mathematical formula that calculates the possibility of undiscovered life.
Instructional Video4:06
Be Smart

The Scale of the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
From the very large to the very small, the universe is an amazing place. Here's my favorite ways to explore its scale.
Instructional Video7:35
SciShow

Space Tourism

12th - Higher Ed
Hank takes on the role of our personal space travel agent, giving us the dirt on the various ways in which the exceptionally wealthy will be able to travel to space in the next few decades.
Instructional Video15:59
TED Talks

Ananda Shankar Jayant: Fighting cancer with dance

12th - Higher Ed
Renowned classical Indian dancer Ananda Shankar Jayant was diagnosed with cancer in 2008. She tells her personal story of not only facing the disease but dancing through it, and gives a performance revealing the metaphor of strength that...
Instructional Video3:22
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The deadly irony of gunpowder - Eric Rosado

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the mid-ninth century, Chinese chemists, hard at work on an immortality potion, instead invented gunpowder. They soon found that this highly inflammable powder was far from an elixir of life -- they put it to use in bombs against...
Instructional Video3:07
SciShow

The Wasp That Reprograms Spiders

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have observed a new parasitic behavior between a wasp and a social species of spider, where the spider re-learned an ancestral behavior!
Instructional Video4:26
SciShow

Meet Zealandia The Earths 8th Continent and RealLife Atlantis

12th - Higher Ed
The story of Atlantis, a mythological continent that vanished into the sea after its inhabitants displeased the gods, has fascinated people for thousands of years. However, the idea of a whole continent sinking into the ocean may be more...
Instructional Video2:34
MinuteEarth

The Science of Hobbit Gluttony

12th - Higher Ed
Because smaller animals have to eat more relative to their bodyweight, Tolkein’s hobbits need to eat a lot - not for comfort, but for survival.
Instructional Video15:15
TED Talks

Anant Agarwal: Why massive open online courses (still) matter

12th - Higher Ed
2013 was a year of hype for MOOCs (massive open online courses). Great big numbers and great big hopes were followed by some disappointing first results. But the head of edX, Anant Agarwal, makes the case that MOOCs still matter -- as a...