Instructional Video2:29
MinuteEarth

How Do Trees Survive Winter?

12th - Higher Ed
Humans can go inside or put on clothes, but trees spend winter naked in the cold. Why don't they all die?
Instructional Video3:47
SciShow

The Real Mayan Apocalypse

12th - Higher Ed
There are just six weeks left until the celestial odometer that is the Mayan calendar clicks over to the next b'akt'un, but in the meantime, scientists have been trying to solve the mystery behind the collapse of the Mayan civilization....
Instructional Video3:17
SciShow

The Great Lakes Tropical Storm of 1996

12th - Higher Ed
Tropical storms can be devastating but at least we usually know where they're going to appear. The exception being a very strange week in 1996, on Lake Huron.
Instructional Video4:04
SciShow

Watch the Delta Aquarids, and Meet NASA's 'Aquanauts'

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow Space preps you for the Delta Aquarids, a meteor shower, and explains what makes them so unique. Plus, join "aquanauts" on one of NASA's least-known missions, a nine-day tour in its NEEMO undersea laboratory.
Instructional Video10:43
TED Talks

TED: Reinventing the encyclopedia game | Rives

12th - Higher Ed
Prompted by the Encyclopaedia Britannica ending its print publication, performance poet Rives resurrects a game from his childhood. Speaking at the TEDxSummit in Doha, Rives takes us on a charming tour through random (and less random)...
Instructional Video6:37
Be Smart

Why Do More Species Live Near The Equator?

12th - Higher Ed
Find out why more species live near the equator!
Instructional Video3:53
SciShow

Learning About Lightning from Superbolts

12th - Higher Ed
If you ask someone to picture a thunderstorm, chances are they will have no problem slipping into a memory of dark clouds and bright flashes screaming out from them. But, incredibly, they’re probably picturing the tame version of...
Instructional Video2:05
MinuteEarth

Why Malaria Isn’t Just A Tropical Disease

12th - Higher Ed
Malaria is a global disease that we've beaten back around the world, including in some tropical places, but we’ve had the hardest time in Africa. ___________________________________________ To learn more, start your googling with these...
Instructional Video4:51
SciShow

Why Are There So Many Species Near the Equator?

12th - Higher Ed
Tropical rainforests are known for being super biologically diverse _ they're full of different species, from colorful birds and insects to plants and fungi. We haven't even come close to cataloguing everything that's there.
Instructional Video11:49
TED Talks

Alasdair Harris: How a handful of fishing villages sparked a marine conservation revolution

12th - Higher Ed
We need a radically new approach to ocean conservation, says marine biologist and TED Fellow Alasdair Harris. In a visionary talk, he lays out a surprising solution to the problem of overfishing that could both revive marine life and...
Instructional Video2:48
MinuteEarth

How Do Trees Survive Winter?

12th - Higher Ed
Humans can go inside or put on clothes, but trees spend winter naked in the cold. Why don't they all die?
Instructional Video3:18
Curated Video

Why Are the Tropics Hotter than The Equator?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The hottest parts of the world do not lie ‘on’ the Equator (as our assumption would suggest) but rather around the tropics, i.e., the areas that lie above and below the Equator. What’s the reason behind this? The answer to this question...
Instructional Video1:22
Curated Video

Exploring Atmospheric Gases and Clouds: Climate Research from Space

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Climate scientists at Leicester University are using data from the NVSAT satellite to study natural fluctuations in the Earth's atmosphere and their impact on climate. By developing specialized software to filter out cloud interference,...
Instructional Video2:27
Curated Video

Wellbeing A-Z -Mosquitoes

12th - Higher Ed
Mosquitoes
Instructional Video1:48
Curated Video

Wellbeing A-Z -Jellyfish

12th - Higher Ed
avoid the dangers of Jellyfish
Instructional Video3:24
Curated Video

The Latitude-Longitude Grid

3rd - Higher Ed
The Latitude-Longitude Grid applies knowledge of coordinates, equator, prime meridian, tropics, and hemispheres by locating places on a map or globe.
Instructional Video3:14
Mazz Media

Solar Thermal Energy on Earth

6th - 8th
This video discusses what thermal energy is and describes how it is generated by radioactive decay and how it contributes to geothermal energy. Viewers will also learn about solar energy, what it is and how it is created by fusion....
Instructional Video5:21
Science360

Is There A Carbon Tipping Point? - The Carbon Cycle

12th - Higher Ed
Is there a carbon tipping point after which consequences will become dire?
Instructional Video14:35
Mazz Media

Climate

6th - 8th
This live-action video program explores the different climates found on earth. Through use of video footage, photographs, diagrams and colorful, animated graphics and labels, viewers will come to understand how weather, landforms and...
Instructional Video6:49
Mediacorp

The Impending Threat of Rising Sea Levels in Singapore

12th - Higher Ed
This video highlights the potential risks of rising sea levels in Singapore due to climate change. It emphasizes the impact on various areas of the city and the urgency for action. The narrator discusses the rate of sea level rise, the...
Instructional Video3:41
NASA

NASA Rainfall Data and Global Fire Weather

3rd - 11th
The Global Fire WEather Database (GFWED) integrates different weather factors influencing the likelihood of a vegetation fire starting and spreading. It is based on the Fire Weather Index (FWI) System, which tracks the dryness of three...
Instructional Video5:27
NASA

Tour 2022: NASA's Upcoming Earth Missions

3rd - 11th
NASA has a unique view of our planet from space. NASA’s fleet of Earth-observing satellites provide high quality data on different parts of Earth’s interconnected environment from air quality to sea ice. Take a tour of missions launching...
Instructional Video5:42
NASA

NASA | A Week in the Life of Rain

3rd - 11th
Rain, snow, hail, ice, and every slushy mix in between make up the precipitation that touches everyone on our planet. But not all places rain equally. Precipitation falls differently in different parts of the world, as you see in NASA's...
Instructional Video3:16
NASA

NASA | TRMM at 15: The Reign of Rain

3rd - 11th
TRMM Project Scientist Scott Braun looks back at the legacy of the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission and a few of the major scientific milestones the satellite has helped achieve.