Instructional Video5:54
SciShow

There Probably Aren't Different Strains of SARS-CoV-2 (Yet)

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists are closely watching SARS-CoV-2 to track mutations and see if it's developed into different strains. So, has it?
Instructional Video6:04
SciShow

There Probably Aren't Different Strains of SARS-CoV-2 (Yet)

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists are closely watching SARS-CoV-2 to track mutations and see if it's developed into different strains. So, has it?
Instructional Video10:17
Bozeman Science

Practice 7 - Engaging in Argument from Evidence

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains the importance of argumentation in improving both understanding and design. This video begins with a discussion of the heliocentric and geocentric model of the Universe that eventually lead to the Copernican...
Instructional Video0:38
Curated Video

Revisión por pares

3rd - 8th
Práctica que consiste en la revisión de un artículo o estudio académico por parte de expertos independientes, que evalúan la calidad y la importancia del trabajo realizado y comprueban que no haya errores.
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Twig - Ciencias...
Instructional Video0:38
Curated Video

Peer review

6th - 12th
The practice of independent experts reviewing an academic paper or research, to scrutinise the quality and importance of the work and check for errors.
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A Twig Science
Glossary Film.
Key scientific terms defined...
Instructional Video5:26
Healthcare Triage

How Can We Fix the Culture of Science? A Podcast

Higher Ed
Healthcare Triage has a podcast, and that podcast recently dropped a special limited series. We've spent a lot of time thinking about the culture of science and how researchers can improve the reproducibility of research. We also talked...
Instructional Video6:44
Curated Video

How to Use the Scientific Method

3rd - Higher Ed
“How to Use the Scientific Method” will explain the steps for properly using the scientific method.
Instructional Video4:39
Curated Video

Fringe Benefits

12th - Higher Ed
Princeton historian of science Michael Gordin describes how being receptive to wacky, unorthodox ideas - up to a point - brings various benefits to our understanding of the world.
Instructional Video2:56
Curated Video

Peer Review

12th - Higher Ed
Princeton historian of science Michael Gordin reflects upon the internal mechanisms behind the publication of Immanuel Velikovsky’s notorious book Worlds In Collision in 1950, explaining how peer review was very different then than it is...
Instructional Video3:35
Curated Video

Guarding Your Turf

12th - Higher Ed
Princeton historian of science Michael Gordin uses the example of Immanuel Velikovsky to describe how those on the fringe of academic disciplines have to be even more vigilant than others about ensuring that they keep out people they...
Podcast19:35
NASA

Small Steps, Giant Leaps: Episode 78, Engineering Best Practices – Part 1 Small Steps, Giant Leaps

Pre-K - Higher Ed
NASA Chief Engineer Ralph Roe discusses engineering best practices.
Instructional Video7:28
Healthcare Triage

Lawsuits as a Tool to Stifle Research

Higher Ed
Health research is difficult for a bunch of reasons. One of those reasons is the practice of using lawsuits to stifle research. A researcher finds that a product is harmful, and the producers of that product attack the researcher in...
Instructional Video5:17
Blockchain Central

Cardano - The Third Generation of Blockchain

Higher Ed
This week on Blockchain Central: we’ll take a closer look at the blockchain technology called Cardano, what are the features of the third generation blockchains and how can it revolutionize the industry.
Instructional Video7:05
Healthcare Triage

Women and Minorities Get Fewer NIH Research Grants

Higher Ed
The peer review process for awarding NIH grants has some problems. Less money is being awarded, and the buying power of the NIH has declined. What's going on with the peer review system?
Instructional Video
Sophia Learning

Sophia: Peer Review

9th - 10th Standards
This video lesson focuses on peer reviews; it defines it and gives reasons students don't like to do them. It explains the peer review process including rereading the paper multiple times looking at specific parts each read, discusses...
Audio
Science Friday Initiative

Science Friday: What Happens When Scientists Get It Wrong?

9th - 10th
Scientists published a study in 2010 that claimed they had discovered an alien bacterium that could create its own DNA with arsenic. Other scientists were skeptical and tried to duplicate their results, without success. In this podcast,...