Instructional Video16:02
TED Talks

Edward Tenner: Unintended consequences

12th - Higher Ed
Every new invention changes the world -- in ways both intentional and unexpected. Historian Edward Tenner tells stories that illustrate the under-appreciated gap between our ability to innovate and our ability to foresee the consequences.
Instructional Video10:32
TED Talks

TED: Let's prepare for our new climate | Vicki Arroyo

12th - Higher Ed
As Vicki Arroyo says, it's time to prepare our homes and cities for our changing climate, with its increased risk of flooding, drought and uncertainty. She illustrates this inspiring talk with bold projects from cities all over the world...
Instructional Video5:13
MinutePhysics

How Airplanes Are Made

12th - Higher Ed
Behind-the-Scenes of an Airbus A350 being built! Thanks to the folks at Airbus for bringing me to France, Germany, & the UK to visit their headquarters and facilities and see so much incredible engineering. As you can probably tell from...
Instructional Video16:32
TED Talks

TED: The nightmare videos of children's YouTube -- and what's wrong with the internet today | James Bridle

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. Writer and artist James Bridle uncovers a dark, strange corner of the internet, where unknown people or groups on...
Instructional Video5:51
SciShow

The UAE's Martian City on Earth

12th - Higher Ed
The United Arab Emirates is planning an enormous colony on Mars, but first they are building the biggest Mars simulator right here on earth.
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The left brain vs. right brain myth - Elizabeth Waters

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The human brain is visibly split into a left and right side. This structure has inspired one of the most pervasive ideas about the brain: that the left side controls logic and the right side controls creativity. And yet, this is a myth,...
Instructional Video14:18
TED Talks

Nancy Etcoff: Happiness and its surprises

12th - Higher Ed
Cognitive researcher Nancy Etcoff looks at happiness -- the ways we try to achieve and increase it, the way it's untethered to our real circumstances, and its surprising effect on our bodies.
Instructional Video8:21
TED Talks

TED: Sanitation is a basic human right - Francis de los Reyes

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. Warning: This talk might contain much more than you'd ever want to know about the way the world poops. But as...
Instructional Video19:07
TED Talks

Ken Robinson: How to escape education's death valley

12th - Higher Ed
Sir Ken Robinson outlines 3 principles crucial for the human mind to flourish -- and how current education culture works against them. In a funny, stirring talk he tells us how to get out of the educational "death valley" we now face,...
Instructional Video17:23
TED Talks

TED: Make data more human | Jer Thorp

12th - Higher Ed
Jer Thorp creates beautiful data visualizations to put abstract data into a human context. At TEDxVancouver, he shares his moving projects, from graphing an entire year's news cycle, to mapping the way people share articles across the...
Instructional Video10:28
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Quantity: Level 6 - Orders of Magnitude

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on orders of magnitude. Scale models - a representation that has been reduced or enlarged to a specific scale Orders of magnitude - is an approximation of the...
Instructional Video18:03
TED Talks

Leyla Acaroglu: Paper beats plastic? How to rethink environmental folklore

12th - Higher Ed
Most of us want to do the right thing when it comes to the environment. But things aren’t as simple as opting for the paper bag, says sustainability strategist Leyla Acaroglu. A bold call for us to let go of tightly-held green myths and...
Instructional Video4:27
TED-Ed

TED-ED: A guide to the energy of the Earth - Joshua M. Sneideman

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Energy is neither created nor destroyed - and yet the global demand for it continues to increase. But where does energy come from, and where does it go? Joshua M. Sneideman examines the many ways in which energy cycles through our...
Instructional Video10:13
Crash Course

The Chemical Mind - Crash Course Psychology

12th - Higher Ed
BAHHHHHH! Did I scare you? What exactly happens when we get scared? How does our brain make our body react? Just what are Neurotransmitters? In this episode of Crash Course Psychology, Hank takes us to the simplest part of the complex...
Instructional Video9:01
TED Talks

Tom Wujec: Got a wicked problem? First, tell me how you make toast

12th - Higher Ed
Making toast doesn’t sound very complicated -- until someone asks you to draw the process, step by step. Tom Wujec loves asking people and teams to draw how they make toast, because the process reveals unexpected truths about how we can...
Instructional Video18:50
TED Talks

TED: My battle to expose government corruption | Heather Brooke

12th - Higher Ed
Our leaders need to be held accountable, says journalist Heather Brooke. And she should know: Brooke uncovered the British Parliamentary financial expenses that led to a major political scandal in 2009. She urges us to ask our leaders...
Instructional Video4:55
SciShow

The Most Stable Neighborhoods in the Universe

12th - Higher Ed
No planet’s trip around a star is exactly like the one before it, because solar systems aren't as static as they first appear. Even small nudges can add up to disaster, but some objects find safe orbits with the help of a partner or two.
Instructional Video18:07
TED Talks

Johan Rockström: Let the environment guide our development

12th - Higher Ed
Human growth has strained the earth's resources, but as Johan Rockström reminds us, our advances also give us the science to recognize this and change behavior. His research has found nine "planetary boundaries" that can guide us in...
Instructional Video17:46
TED Talks

Paul Ewald: Can we domesticate germs?

12th - Higher Ed
Evolutionary biologist Paul Ewald drags us into the sewer to discuss germs. Why are some more harmful than others? How could we make the harmful ones benign? Searching for answers, he examines a disgusting, fascinating case: diarrhea.
Instructional Video20:49
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: More about Animal Weapons with Doug Emlen & Professor Claw the Emperor Scorpion

12th - Higher Ed
Doug Emlen returns to SciShow to talk about the parallels between arms races in animals and arms races in humans. Then Jessi joins the show to show off an animal with it's own set of weapons.
Instructional Video2:39
MinuteEarth

How The Modern World Tricks Our Bodies Into Hurting Themselves

12th - Higher Ed
The same enzyme that used to save us is now killing us because the body reactions it catalyzes now cause more harm than good.
Instructional Video6:16
TED Talks

Christopher Soghoian: How to avoid surveillance ... with the phone in your pocket

12th - Higher Ed
Who is listening in on your phone calls? On a landline, it could be anyone, says privacy activist Christopher Soghoian, because surveillance backdoors are built into the phone system by default, to allow governments to listen in. But...
Instructional Video12:56
TED Talks

TED: What's it like to be a robot? | Leila Takayama

12th - Higher Ed
We already live among robots: tools and machines like dishwashers and thermostats so integrated into our lives that we'd never think to call them that. What will a future with even more robots look like? Social scientist Leila Takayama...
Instructional Video10:31
TED Talks

TED: How artists can (finally) get paid in the digital age | Jack Conte

12th - Higher Ed
It's been a weird 100 years for artists and creators, says musician and entrepreneur Jack Conte. The traditional ways we've turned art into money (like record sales) have been broken by the internet, leaving musicians, writers and...