Instructional Video12:32
TED Talks

TED: The hidden danger of lead in soil | Yvette Cabrera

12th - Higher Ed
There's an invisible health threat right under our feet, says investigative journalist Yvette Cabrera. She digs into the pervasive problem of lead contamination in soil — a particular risk for children in cities — and shares her action...
Instructional Video10:21
TED Talks

TED: The Encyclopedia of Invisibility — a home for lost stories | Tavares Strachan

12th - Higher Ed
Conceptual artist Tavares Strachan creates the kinds of projects that make you stop in your tracks, like a 4.5-ton block of Arctic ice he brought back to his birthplace in the Bahamas or a gold, Egyptian-inspired sculpture he launched...
Instructional Video5:29
SciShow Kids

Looking at the Earth! | How We Study Space | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
If you were looking down at the Earth from space, what would you be able to see? Do you think you would be able to see your house? What if you were super far away?
News Clip7:32
PBS

Surfer girls make waves and defy expectations in Bangladesh

12th - Higher Ed
In Bangladesh's only beach town, there are just a handful of girls who ride the waves. In fact, most people there frown upon seeing girl surfers, who have faced threats from conservative Muslims in the neighborhood. But surfing makes...
News Clip6:08
PBS

A public housing project where healthy living is the foundation

12th - Higher Ed
In downtown Denver, a recently built public housing project is designed to foster healthy living, with access to nutritious food, access to doctors and ease of exercise. Jeffrey Brown reports.
News Clip6:48
PBS

Tornado-stricken Joplin now thrives, but emotional scars linger

12th - Higher Ed
The tornado that struck Joplin, Missouri, in May 2011 was one of the most destructive in U.S. history. Five years later, the city seems to be thriving -- possibly even better off than it was before. One key to its success? Getting...
News Clip6:10
PBS

Irresistible to tourists, has Venice become unwelcoming to its inhabitants?

12th - Higher Ed
Venice has long been a city of trade and travelers, but Venetians now feel tourism is squeezing them out. The city is currently losing about 1,000 residents every year as the cost of housing rises and mass tourism poses a threat to food,...
News Clip6:28
PBS

Rebuilding a Chicago neighborhood thru connections to Muslim community

12th - Higher Ed
The South Side of Chicago has long been plagued with some of the highest crime rates in the nation, but a man of faith is trying to transform the area by focusing on the everyday needs of those who live there. Jeffrey Brown visits the...
News Clip8:09
PBS

Wall St. millionaire brings healthy food to those in need

12th - Higher Ed
Sam Polk was making millions on Wall Street when he had a life-changing revelation: he wanted to help those in need. His focus became so-called "food deserts," regions with limited access to healthy food. Polk founded Everytable to serve...
News Clip8:57
PBS

How do you make the benefits of pre-K education last?

12th - Higher Ed
A study suggesting the benefits of pre-K may not be long-lasting has sparked debate in Tennessee, where proposals for state-funded, universal programs are an issue in this year's governor's race. What's behind the finding, and what are...
News Clip3:08
PBS

Why we need to stop sharing American Dream success stories

12th - Higher Ed
Why would author Casey Gerald want people to stop highlighting success stories like his own? Gerald says he grew up on "the wrong side of the tracks" and went on to Harvard Business school. But he says celebrations of the American Dream...
News Clip7:28
PBS

Author Wes Moore's Book Explores His Own Alternate Reality (May 12, 2010) (7:15)

12th - Higher Ed
Judy Woodruff talks to Baltimore native Wes Moore about his new book, 'The Other Wes Moore' which explores the stories of two inner-city young men who share the same name, but lead very different lives.
News Clip9:55
PBS

How Rust Belt City Youngstown hopes to overcome decades of decline

12th - Higher Ed
Youngstown, Ohio is an upper-midwest city that has come to symbolize the nation's distress of deindustrialization with high unemployment and crime rates. But after decades of decline, the city has plans to rebuild, remove blight and...
News Clip2:37
PBS

Why we need to stop sharing American Dream success stories

12th - Higher Ed
Why would author Casey Gerald want people to stop highlighting success stories like his own? Gerald says he grew up on "the wrong side of the tracks" and went on to Harvard Business school. But he says celebrations of the American Dream...
News Clip8:21
PBS

"The Hate U Give" tackles police violence against

12th - Higher Ed
The young adult novel "The Hate U Give" tells the story of a teenager whose childhood friend is shot and killed by a police officer. In the book, now a finalist for a National Book Award and Kirkus Prize, author Angie Thomas addresses...
Instructional Video15:17
TED Talks

Mia Birdsong: The story we tell about poverty isn't true

12th - Higher Ed
As a global community, we all want to end poverty. Mia Birdsong suggests a great place to start: Let's honor the skills, drive and initiative that poor people bring to the struggle every day. She asks us to look again at people in...
Instructional Video10:49
Crash Course

Do the Right Thing: Crash Course Film Criticism

12th - Higher Ed
Mainstream American films don’t often tackle race and racism head-on, and when they do, they often end up trying to find easy answers. Which makes films like Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing all the more powerful. It’s an intimate portrait...
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 Video13:30
TED Talks

Amanda Williams: Why I turned Chicago's abandoned homes into art

12th - Higher Ed
Amanda Williams shares her lifelong fascination with the complexity of color: from her experiences with race and redlining to her discovery of color theory to her work as a visual artist. Journey with Williams to Chicago's South Side and...
Instructional Video7:11
TED Talks

TED: Why open a school? To close a prison | Nadia Lopez

12th - Higher Ed
Our kids are our future, and it's crucial they believe it themselves. That's why Nadia Lopez opened an academic oasis in Brownsville, Brooklyn, one of the most underserved and violent neighborhoods in New York -- because she believes in...
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

The Milky Way Is Missing Satellite Galaxies

12th - Higher Ed
There’s a big difference between the number of satellites that simulations predict, and the number we’ve actually seen with telescopes, but why?
Instructional Video16:38
TED Talks

TED: 4 environmental 'heresies' | Stewart Brand

12th - Higher Ed
The man who helped usher in the environmental movement in the 1960s and '70s has been rethinking his positions on cities, nuclear power, genetic modification and geo-engineering. This talk at the US State Department is a foretaste of his...
Instructional Video12:22
TED Talks

TED: How urban agriculture is transforming Detroit | Devita Davison

12th - Higher Ed
There's something amazing growing in the city of Detroit: healthy, accessible, delicious, fresh food. In a spirited talk, fearless farmer Devita Davison explains how features of Detroit's decay actually make it an ideal spot for urban...
Instructional Video9:01
TED Talks

TED: The arts festival revolution | David Binder

12th - Higher Ed
David Binder is a major Broadway producer, but last summer he found himself in a small Australian neighborhood, watching locals dance and perform on their lawns -- and loving it. He shows us the new face of arts festivals, which break...