Instructional Video3:14
Crash Course Kids

Resources: Welcome to the Neighborhood

3rd - 8th
Welcome to the Neighborhood! Humans need a lot of things to survive (I'm sure you've noticed). We need food, water, and shelter and it takes a lot of resources to get all of those things. What are resources? In this episode of Crash...
Instructional Video6:41
SciShow

How We Manipulate Our Brains With Electricity

12th - Higher Ed
Obviously, you can’t just plant a chip in someone’s head and start manipulating their thoughts and behavior, but doctors and scientists CAN use electricity to activate or inhibit certain parts of the brain. And they can use this power to...
Instructional Video8:24
TED Talks

Social media and the end of gender - Johanna Blakley

12th - Higher Ed
Media and advertising companies still use the same old demographics to understand audiences, but they're becoming increasingly harder to track online, says media researcher Johanna Blakley. As social media outgrows traditional media, and...
Instructional Video5:02
SciShow

Can Trauma Be Inherited?

12th - Higher Ed
Trauma doesn't just affect the person who originally experienced it. It can also be passed down to their children and grandchildren.
Instructional Video8:50
SciShow

The Science of Anti-Vaccination

12th - Higher Ed
Fewer children in the United States are getting vaccinated. That's bad news for those kids, and also for public health in general. Often, the response is to argue and debate and get angry at people who are we see as making terrible,...
Instructional Video8:20
Crash Course

Indiana Jones & Pascal's Wager: Crash Course Philosophy

12th - Higher Ed
Today we conclude our unit on Philosophy of Religion and Hank gets a little help from Indiana Jones to explain religious pragmatism and Pascal’s Wager, fideism, and Kierkegaard’s leap to faith.
Instructional Video15:08
TED Talks

TED: How to build synthetic DNA and send it across the internet | Dan Gibson

12th - Higher Ed
Biologist Dan Gibson edits and programs DNA, just like coders program a computer. But his "code" creates life, giving scientists the power to convert digital information into biological material like proteins and vaccines. Now he's on to...
Instructional Video6:43
TED Talks

TED: How quinoa can help combat hunger and malnutrition | Cedric Habiyaremye

12th - Higher Ed
On a mission to create a hunger-free world, agricultural entrepreneur Cedric Habiyaremye makes the case for cultivating quinoa -- and other versatile, nutrient-rich grains -- in places experiencing malnutrition, like his native Rwanda....
Instructional Video19:06
SciShow

Antarctic Lava to Pink Snow: The Science of Winter

12th - Higher Ed
"If you live in the northern hemisphere, there's a decent chance you're in a winter wonderland right now. Settle in with a hot drink for this winter compilation and learn about some of the interesting things that make winter wondrous!
Instructional Video16:37
TED Talks

Rob Reid: How synthetic biology could wipe out humanity -- and how we can stop it

12th - Higher Ed
The world-changing promise of synthetic biology and gene editing has a dark side. In this far-seeing talk, author and entrepreneur Rob Reid reviews the risks of a world where more and more people have access to the tools and tech needed...
Instructional Video5:40
SciShow

The FOMO Is Real - But You Can Overcome It

12th - Higher Ed
FOMO (the fear of missing out) is a fairly common phenomenon, especially in this digital age. It can cause you significant stress and anxiety, but luckily psychologists have come up with a few tricks to combat it.
Instructional Video10:15
TED Talks

TED: How protest is redefining democracy around the world | Zachariah Mampilly

12th - Higher Ed
The democratic process is messy, complicated and often inefficient -- but across Africa, activists are redefining democracy by putting protest at its center. In an illuminating talk, political scientist Zachariah Mampilly gives us a...
Instructional Video5:54
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Is life meaningless? And other absurd questions | Nina Medvinskaya

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Albert Camus grew up surrounded by violence. His homeland of Algeria was mired in conflict. He lost his father in World War I. Seeing World War II's devastation, Camus grew despondent. What was the meaning behind all this endless...
Instructional Video11:49
TED Talks

TED: Tips for reclaiming your peace of mind online | Naomi Shimada

12th - Higher Ed
TED talks about tips for reclaiming your peace of mind online | Naomi Shimada
Instructional Video29:51
TED Talks

TED: COVID-19 unraveled the workforce. Here's how to fix it | Mary L. Gray

12th - Higher Ed
We are living through the tech-enabled unraveling of full-time employment itself, says anthropologist Mary L. Gray. As the pandemic exposes and accelerates the shift to on-demand online labor, Gray takes us inside the jobs being created...
Instructional Video5:03
TED Talks

LaToya Ruby Frazier: A visual history of inequality in industrial America

12th - Higher Ed
For the last 12 years, LaToya Ruby Frazier has photographed friends, neighbors and family in Braddock, Pennsylvania. But though the steel town has lately been hailed as a posterchild of "rustbelt revitalization," Frazier's pictures tell...
Instructional Video11:03
TED Talks

Tara Houska: The Standing Rock resistance and our fight for indigenous rights

12th - Higher Ed
Still invisible and often an afterthought, indigenous peoples are uniting to protect the world's water, lands and history -- while trying to heal from genocide and ongoing inequality. Tribal attorney and Couchiching First Nation citizen...
Instructional Video5:43
TED Talks

The shadow pandemic of domestic violence during COVID-19 | Kemi DaSilva-Ibru

12th - Higher Ed
Mandatory lockdowns, quarantines and shelter-in-place orders meant to contain COVID-19 have created a shadow pandemic of domestic abuse, says physician Kemi DaSilva-Ibru. Sharing alarming statistics on the rise of gender-based violence...
Instructional Video2:31
SciShow Kids

Blobfish: The World's Ugliest Animal | Biology for Kids | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
The blobfish has been called "The World's Ugliest Animal", but it's actually really cool. Find out why it's shaped the way it is with Jessi and Squeaks.
Instructional Video12:36
TED Talks

Marco Annunziata: Welcome to the age of the industrial internet

12th - Higher Ed
Everyone's talking about the "Internet of Things," but what exactly does that mean for our future? In this thoughtful talk, economist Marco Annunziata looks at how technology is transforming the industrial sector, creating machines that...
Instructional Video9:44
TED Talks

TED: The power of diversity within yourself | Rebeca Hwang

12th - Higher Ed
Rebeca Hwang has spent a lifetime juggling identities -- Korean heritage, Argentinian upbringing, education in the United States -- and for a long time she had difficulty finding a place in the world to call home. Yet along with these...
Instructional Video13:32
TED Talks

TED: What we can do to die well | Timothy Ihrig

12th - Higher Ed
The healthcare industry in America is so focused on pathology, surgery and pharmacology -- on what doctors "do" to patients -- that it often overlooks the values of the human beings it's supposed to care for. Palliative care physician...
Instructional Video12:45
TED Talks

TED: The creativity, innovation and ingenuity languishing in US prisons | Brittany K. Barnett

12th - Higher Ed
The freedom journey doesn't end when someone is released from prison. In many ways, it begins. Attorney and entrepreneur Brittany K. Barnett fights to free people from prison and champions restoring and nurturing the creative ingenuity...
Instructional Video11:26
SciShow

6 Parasites That Live INSIDE Cells

12th - Higher Ed
When you think "parasite," you might think of leeches or some nasty tape worm, but there are some that can live inside your very own cells. Chapters Plasmodium 0:56 Rickettsia 2:49 ROCKY MOUNTAIN SPOTTED FEVER 2:59 Legionella 4:09...