Instructional Video3:29
SciShow Kids

Solar-Powered Slugs

K - 5th
We need to eat food to fuel our bodies, but this special slug, called emerald elysia, can make food using sunlight - just like plants do!



All organisms have external parts. Different animals use their body parts in...
Instructional Video6:18
SciShow Kids

Life in the Redwoods | Surprising Animals of the Redwood Forest

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks are learning more about the redwoods, and all the different animals that live in the different layers!



Second Grade Next Generation Science

Standards

Dis

ciplinary Core Idea:

LS4.D:...
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow Kids

The Very Long Time of the Dinosaurs! | History of Life! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Dino stops by the Fort to learn all about dinosaurs with Jessi and Squeaks! Did you know that dinosaurs were on Earth for so long that not all dinosaurs lived at the same time?!



2nd Grade Next Generation Science...
Instructional Video7:05
TED Talks

TED: How NASA invented a ventilator for COVID-19 ... in 37 days | Dan Goods

12th - Higher Ed
Get the behind-the-scenes story from visual strategist Dan Goods about how a single question launched NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab into action at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, propelling an unprecedented pivot from...
Instructional Video11:05
TED Talks

How carbon capture networks could help curb climate change | Bas Sudmeijer

12th - Higher Ed
What if we could build a global waste disposal service for carbon? In this forward-thinking talk, carbon capture advisor Bas Sudmeijer proposes building CO2 networks: partnerships between cities around the world that would share the cost...
Instructional Video8:07
TED Talks

TED: How to support and celebrate living artists | Swizz Beatz

12th - Higher Ed
Legendary hip-hop producer Swizz Beatz is on a mission to revolutionize the way artists do business. In this glorious talk, he shares some of the ways he's helping fellow creatives thrive, including a roving art fair that gives artists...
Instructional Video5:35
TED Talks

Romain Lacombe: A personal air-quality tracker that lets you know what you're breathing

12th - Higher Ed
How often do you think about the air you're breathing? Probably not enough, says entrepreneur and TED Fellow Romain Lacombe. He introduces Flow: a personal air-quality tracker that fits in your hand and monitors pollution levels in real...
Instructional Video5:30
Curated Video

How Being Sick Changes Your Brain

12th - Higher Ed
When you're sick you just want to be left alone. Sometimes that's because you physically can't move, but other times, it might have more to do with the way your immune system is connected to your brain.
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The myth of the moon goddess | Cynthia Fay Davis

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The sun god was in love with the moon goddess, Ix Chel. But the goddess' grandfather was very possessive, and would not let the sun god anywhere near his beloved granddaughter. Desperate to be together, they escaped and were ready to...
Instructional Video5:35
SciShow

Can You Use Electricity to Supercharge Your Brain?

12th - Higher Ed
tDCS devices claim to stimulate your brain and have psychological benefits, but do they really work?
Instructional Video14:42
TED Talks

TED: America's forgotten working class | J.D. Vance

12th - Higher Ed
J.D. Vance grew up in a small, poor city in the Rust Belt of southern Ohio, where he had a front-row seat to many of the social ills plaguing America: a heroin epidemic, failing schools, families torn apart by divorce and sometimes...
Instructional Video15:43
SciShow Kids

Our Favorites | Compilation

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks are packing up for a long trip, but before saying goodbye, wanted to share some of their favorite videos.
Instructional Video13:31
TED Talks

TED: The informal settlements reshaping the world | Jota Samper

12th - Higher Ed
Creative, sustainable solutions find their home in the thousands of informal neighborhoods across the world. Urban planner Jota Samper believes these often overlooked settlements (also known as slums) should be regarded as hubs of...
Instructional Video12:50
TED Talks

Love, sorrow and the emotions that power climate action | Knut Ivar Bjørlykhaug

12th - Higher Ed
Picture your favorite place in nature. How would you feel if it disappeared tomorrow? In this love letter to the planet, social worker and environmental activist Knut Ivar Bjørlykhaug invites us to confront the deep, difficult emotions...
Instructional Video8:12
TED Talks

TED: Mental health care that disrupts cycles of violence | Celina de Sola

12th - Higher Ed
In Latin American countries like El Salvador, homicide rates are alarmingly high thanks in large part to a vicious cycle of violence -- people don't have a chance to heal from recurrent individual and collective trauma. With her team at...
Instructional Video4:03
SciShow

The Science Behind Football's First-Down Line

12th - Higher Ed
If you’ve watch American football on television, you may have wondered how they make that yellow first down line look like it’s actually down on the field.
Instructional Video10:18
TED Talks

TED: Meet the robots for humanity | Henry Evans and Chad Jenkins

12th - Higher Ed
Paralyzed by a stroke, Henry Evans uses a telepresence robot to take the stage and show how new robotics, tweaked and personalized by a group called Robots for Humanity, help him live his life to the full. He shows off a nimble little...
Instructional Video12:31
TED Talks

Kotchakorn Voraakhom: How to transform sinking cities into landscapes that fight floods

12th - Higher Ed
From London to Tokyo, climate change is causing cities to sink -- and our modern concrete infrastructure is making us even more vulnerable to severe flooding, says landscape architect and TED Fellow Kotchakorn Voraakhom. But what if we...
Instructional Video11:36
TED Talks

TED: Why the hospital of the future will be your own home | Niels van Namen

12th - Higher Ed
Nobody likes going to the hospital, whether it's because of the logistical challenges of getting there, the astronomical costs of procedures or the alarming risks of complications like antibiotic-resistant bacteria. But what if we could...
Instructional Video18:23
TED Talks

Penelope Boston: There might just be life on Mars

12th - Higher Ed
So the Mars Rovers didn't scoop up any alien lifeforms. Scientist Penelope Boston thinks there's a good chance -- a 25 to 50 percent chance, in fact -- that life might exist on Mars, deep inside the planet's caves. She details how we...
Instructional Video2:36
MinuteEarth

An Unexpected Consequence of COVID

12th - Higher Ed
The global pandemic led to a drop in outdoor air pollution, but it also led to an increase in indoor air pollution - and our exposure to it.
Instructional Video9:32
TED Talks

TED: How to foster productive and responsible debate | Ishan Bhabha

12th - Higher Ed
The clash of ideas is fundamental to creativity and progress, but it can also be deeply destructive and create divisions within companies, communities and families. How do you foster productive debate while protecting against harmful...
Instructional Video11:38
SciShow

6 Things We Still Don't Know About Earth

12th - Higher Ed
The earth is our home, and while we like to think we know a good deal about it, there are still some mysteries that scientists are looking to unravel.

Cha
pters
PLATE
TECTONI
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1:45
EXTROVERSION...
Instructional Video6:10
Be Smart

How Baby Sea Turtles Find Their Way Home

12th - Higher Ed
Find out how baby sea turtles find their way home after hatching!