Instructional Video14:06
TED Talks

TED: Why AI needs a "nutrition label" | Kasia Chmielinski

12th - Higher Ed
What do sandwiches have to do with AI? Data reformist Kasia Chmielinski helps us think about artificial intelligence with a useful food metaphor — and breaks down why AI systems should have "nutrition labels" to ensure the development of...
Instructional Video9:49
TED Talks

TED: Your right to repair AI systems | Rumman Chowdhury

12th - Higher Ed
For AI to achieve its full potential, non-experts need to contribute to its development, says Rumman Chowdhury, CEO and cofounder of Humane Intelligence. She shares how the right-to-repair movement of consumer electronics provides a...
Instructional Video14:30
TED Talks

TED: With AI, anyone can be a coder now | Thomas Dohmke

12th - Higher Ed
What if you could code just by talking out loud? GitHub CEO Thomas Dohmke shows how, thanks to AI, the barrier to entry to coding is rapidly disappearing — and creating software is becoming as simple (and joyful) as building LEGO. In a...
Instructional Video9:47
Amoeba Sisters

Human Body Systems Overview (Updated 2024)

12th - Higher Ed
Explore 11 human body systems with the Amoeba Sisters in this updated video (2024). This video focuses on general functions for the following systems (and also provides a few structure examples): Circulatory, Digestive, Endocrine,...
Instructional Video13:12
PBS

Building Black Holes in a Lab

12th - Higher Ed
Black holes are about the worst subjects for direct study in the universe. But at this stage, it’s all we can do to convince ourselves of their existence. Actually studying the physics of real black holes is much, much harder. I mean, we...
Instructional Video14:48
PBS

What If the Galactic Habitable Zone LIMITS Intelligent Life?

12th - Higher Ed
Our solar system is a tiny bubble of habitability suspended in a vast universe that mostly wants to kill us. In fact, a good fraction of our own galaxy turns out to be utterly uninhabitable, even for sun—like stellar systems. Is this why...
Instructional Video11:42
PBS

Will Constructor Theory REWRITE Physics?

12th - Higher Ed
The people behind the greatest leaps in physics - Einstein, Newton, Heisenberg, all had the uncanny ability to see the fundamentals - see the deepest, underlying facts about the world, and from simple statements about reality they built...
Instructional Video14:01
PBS

How Quantum Entanglement Creates Entropy

12th - Higher Ed
Entropy is surely one of the most perplexing concepts in physics. It’s variously described as a measure of a system’s disorder - or as the amount of useful work that you can get from it - or as the information hidden by the system....
Instructional Video12:16
TED Talks

TED: Can AI help solve the climate crisis? | Sims Witherspoon

12th - Higher Ed
AI can be a transformational tool in our fight against climate change, says Sims Witherspoon, a leader at the AI research lab Google DeepMind. Using wind power as her case study, she explains how powerful neural networks can help us...
Instructional Video8:10
TED Talks

TED: Why are we making pizza boxes out of endangered trees? | Nicole Rycroft

12th - Higher Ed
If we're going to solve the climate crisis, we need to talk about supply chains, says biodiversity champion and 2023 Audacious Project grantee Nicole Rycroft. Her organization, Canopy, partners with key industry leaders to overhaul their...
Instructional Video6:32
SciShow

Why Astronauts Need Farm-to-Table

12th - Higher Ed
Growing food in space will be necessary to support the future of space exploration. And it won't be monoculture, either. Here's why astronauts will be growing whole ecosystems in space.
Instructional Video6:11
SciShow

Why Bacteria Don't Outweigh the Earth

12th - Higher Ed
This episode is brought to you by the Music for Scientists album! Check out “The Idea” music video here: • The Idea, written... . Given just a little time, bacteria could outgrow earth, so what's stopping them?
Instructional Video5:46
SciShow

There's a Loophole in One of the Most Important Laws of Physics

12th - Higher Ed
The laws of thermodynamics are cornerstones of physics - but one of them is more breakable than it appears. Hosted by: Olivia Gordon
Instructional Video14:03
TED Talks

TED: The urgent risks of runaway AI -- and what to do about them | Gary Marcus

12th - Higher Ed
Will truth and reason survive the evolution of artificial intelligence? AI researcher Gary Marcus says no, not if untrustworthy technology continues to be integrated into our lives at such dangerously high speeds. He advocates for an...
Instructional Video5:32
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: 1816: The year with no summer | David Biello

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1815, Mount Tambora erupted and its emissions spread across the globe, blotting out the sun for almost an entire year. This wreaked havoc on agriculture, leading to famines all across the Northern hemisphere. It was the year without...
Instructional Video8:45
TED Talks

TED: How to design a school for the future | Punya Mishra

12th - Higher Ed
In all the conversations about improving education for children, the voices of students, teachers and community members are often left out. Educational designer Punya Mishra offers a method to shift that paradigm, taking us through new...
Instructional Video8:13
TED Talks

TED: What happens to gas stations when the world goes electric? | Emily Grubert

12th - Higher Ed
When the world goes fully electric, what happens to the cars, tools and livelihoods that rely on fossil fuels? Civil engineer and environmental sociologist Emily Grubert visualizes what a clean energy future will look like, outlining the...
Instructional Video12:17
3Blue1Brown

Cramer's rule, explained geometrically | Essence of linear algebra, chapter 12

12th - Higher Ed
What Cramer's rule is, and a geometric reason it's true
Instructional Video9:38
Bozeman Science

Environmental Systems

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how matter and energy are conserved within the Earth's system. Matter is a closed system and Energy is open to the surroundings. In natural systems steady state is maintained through feedback loops...
Instructional Video4:49
Bozeman Science

Systems and Objects

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains the differences between a system and an object. Depending on the scale it often times easies to view a system as an object if the constituent parts aren't relevant to the question being asked. He also...
Instructional Video12:33
Crash Course

Meet Your Master: Getting to Know Your Brain - Crash Course Psychology

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode of Crash Course Psychology, we get to meet the brain. Hank talks us through the Central Nervous System, the ancestral structures of the brain, the limbic system, and new structures of the brain. Plus, what does Phineas...
Instructional Video6:24
SciShow

How Engineers Move Medicine Around the World

12th - Higher Ed
Modern medicine has made great strides when it comes to treating and preventing some of the worst diseases in history. But getting that medicine from labs to remote regions presents some interesting engineering challenges.
Instructional Video12:22
Crash Course

21st Century Challenges: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
The 21st century brought a whole new host of challenges to the world, and Europe was no exception. In this video you'll learn about how an increasingly connected and complex world led to some pretty deep rifts in countries across the...
Instructional Video17:42
TED Talks

TED: Machine intelligence makes human morals more important | Zeynep Tufekci

12th - Higher Ed
Machine intelligence is here, and we're already using it to make subjective decisions. But the complex way AI grows and improves makes it hard to understand and even harder to control. In this cautionary talk, techno-sociologist Zeynep...