Instructional Video4:08
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the secret assassin society riddle? | Alex Rosenthal

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Your agent has infiltrated a life or death poker game in a hidden back room of a grand casino. Your team is on the trail of an elite society of assassins, each of whom carries a signature playing card corresponding to their role—...
Instructional Video3:20
SciShow

Camel Dung was The First Probiotic

12th - Higher Ed
Back in the day, bacterial diseases like dysentery were super deadly, but the nomadic people in northern Africa had long known about an effective, if hard to swallow, cure.
Instructional Video8:02
SciShow

9 Animals That Will Outlive Humans

12th - Higher Ed
Human beings will survive a long time—but due to amazing survival techniques, these 9 animal species will definitely live longer. Join Michael Aranda for a new episode of SciShow, and find out why these species will outlive us!
Instructional Video5:27
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Hawaiian story of the king's betrayal | Sydney Iaukea

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Long ago, the Hawaiian wind goddess wielded a gourd that housed the winds of the Islands. It came to hold her bones, along with the life force they carried, and was eventually passed to her grandson, Paka'a. Like his father before him,...
Instructional Video5:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is a poop transplant, and how does it work? | Kathryn M. Stephenson and David L. Suskind

Pre-K - Higher Ed
1,700 years ago, Chinese alchemist Ge Hong was renowned for his soup that could cure diarrhea-stricken patients. It had a surprising secret ingredient: feces. While it might seem unwise to consume feces, exciting new research suggests...
Instructional Video5:11
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: When did slavery actually end in the United States? | Karlos Hill and Soraya Field Fiorio

Pre-K - Higher Ed
At the end of the Civil War, though slavery was technically illegal in all states, it still persisted in the last bastions of the Confederacy. This was the case when Union General Gordon Granger marched his troops into Galveston, Texas...
Instructional Video11:04
SciShow

How Alchemy Led to Modern-Day Chemistry & Medicine

12th - Higher Ed
At the heart of alchemy was the quest to turn ordinary metals into gold. Despite the hopelessness of that goal, alchemists still made a lot of discoveries that formed the foundation of modern chemistry and medicine.
Instructional Video25:50
SciShow

How to Get Things Done by NOT Doing Them | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve all pulled an all-nighter studying for an exam or skipped lunch to meet a deadline, but you may be productive in all of life if you give yourself time to take breaks. And take a breath. Chapters staff burn-out 1:41 Maslach Burnout...
Instructional Video5:04
TED Talks

TED: The future of good food in China | Matilda Ho

12th - Higher Ed
Fresh food free of chemicals and pesticides is hard to come by in China: in 2016, the Chinese government revealed half a million food safety violations in just nine months. In the absence of safe, sustainable food sources, TED Fellow...
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

The Secrets Underneath Jupiter's Atmosphere

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve probed some 250 kilometers into Jupiter’s atmosphere, and that’s raised some new questions about the mysterious planet. And we’ve taken another important step in looking for life on Mars by using a common chemistry process for the...
Instructional Video4:00
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Chinese legend of the butterfly lovers | Lijun Zhang

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Although only boys were allowed at the Confucius Academy, what Zhu Yingtai wanted was to go to school. She begged her parents to let her attend dressed as a boy and, seeing her determination and clever disguises, they finally agreed— as...
Instructional Video19:27
TED Talks

Jane McGonigal: The game that can give you 10 extra years of life

12th - Higher Ed
When game designer Jane McGonigal found herself bedridden and suicidal following a severe concussion, she had a fascinating idea for how to get better. She dove into the scientific research and created the healing game, SuperBetter. In...
Instructional Video5:13
TED Talks

TED: How free is our freedom of the press? | Trevor Timm

12th - Higher Ed
In the uS, the press has a right to publish secret information the public needs to know, protected by the First Amendment. Government surveillance has made it increasingly more dangerous for whistleblowers, the source of virtually every...
Instructional Video13:39
TED Talks

TED: The lies we tell pregnant women | Sofia Jawed-Wessel

12th - Higher Ed
When we tell women that sex isn't worth the risk during pregnancy, what we're telling her is that her sexual pleasure doesn't matter ... that she in fact doesn't matter, says sex researcher Sofia Jawed-Wessel. In this eye-opening talk,...
Instructional Video11:27
TED Talks

TED: A taboo-free way to talk about periods | Aditi Gupta

12th - Higher Ed
It's true: talking about menstruation makes many people uncomfortable. And that taboo has consequences: in India, three out of every 10 girls don't even know what menstruation is at the time of their first period, and restrictive customs...
Instructional Video4:26
Crash Course Kids

What's My Property

3rd - 8th
What exactly can we tell about an unknown substance by it's properties. We already know that a substance is matter that’s made of one kind of atom or molecule, and that has specific properties and that some substances are elements, which...
Instructional Video8:30
Bozeman Science

Diploid vs. Haploid Cells

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the difference between diploid and haploid cells. He starts with a brief description of the central dogma and how genes code for proteins. He then uses the phenotype of red hair to explain that humans...
Instructional Video6:11
TED Talks

TED: The Jill and Julia Show | Jill Sobule + Julia Sweeney

12th - Higher Ed
Two TED favorites, Jill Sobule and Julia Sweeney, team up for a delightful set that mixes witty songwriting with a little bit of social commentary.
Instructional Video8:35
TED Talks

George Dyson: The story of Project Orion

12th - Higher Ed
Author George Dyson spins the story of Project Orion, a massive, nuclear-powered spacecraft that could have taken us to Saturn in five years. His insider’s perspective and a secret cache of documents bring an Atomic Age dream to life.
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 Video11:16
TED Talks

Frank Warren: Half a million secrets

12th - Higher Ed
"Secrets can take many forms -- they can be shocking, or silly, or soulful." Frank Warren, the founder of PostSecret.com, shares some of the half-million secrets that strangers have mailed him on postcards.
Instructional Video8:13
SciShow

9 Animals That Will Outlive Us

12th - Higher Ed
Lack of food, no sunlight and nuclear disaster might mean the end of the world for humans, but these 9 animals just might make it.
Instructional Video6:54
TED Talks

TED: Evolution's gift of play, from bonobo apes to humans | Isabel Behncke

12th - Higher Ed
With never-before-seen video, primatologist Isabel Behncke Izquierdo (a TED Fellow) shows how bonobo ape society learns from constantly playing -- solo, with friends, even as a prelude to sex. Indeed, play appears to be the bonobos' key...
Instructional Video18:43
TED Talks

TED: How to spot a liar | Pamela Meyer

12th - Higher Ed
On any given day we're lied to from 10 to 200 times, and the clues to detect those lies can be subtle and counter-intuitive. Pamela Meyer, author of Liespotting, shows the manners and "hotspots" used by those trained to recognize...