Instructional Video8:52
3Blue1Brown

Circle Division Solution

12th - Higher Ed
Moser's circle problem, and its solution.
Instructional Video6:49
Bozeman Science

AP Biology Practice 5 - Analyze Data and Evaluate Evidence

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how scientists analyze data and evaluate evidence. He starts with a description of data and how it must be properly displayed. He then describes types of data in each of the four big ideas. He finally...
Instructional Video12:39
3Blue1Brown

What does area have to do with slope? | Essence of calculus, chapter 9

12th - Higher Ed
Derivatives are about slope, and integration is about area. These ideas seem completely different, so why are they inverses?
Instructional Video17:38
3Blue1Brown

But what is a partial differential equation? | DE2

12th - Higher Ed
The heat equation, as an introductory PDE.
Instructional Video5:56
Bozeman Science

Force-Time Graph

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains hot the force-time graph can be used to determine the impulse of an object. Since the impulse and the change in momentum are equivalent the graph can also be used to determine the change in momentum...
Instructional Video12:13
PBS

Did Dark Energy Just Disappear?

12th - Higher Ed
Why are we talking about dark energy again? Because another team has just announced a new analysis of updated supernova data. They claim that the data are consistent with there being NO dark energy - no accelerating expansion. They...
Instructional Video11:46
PBS

Proving Pick's Theorem

12th - Higher Ed
What is Pick's Theorem and how can we prove it?
Instructional Video4:19
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Music and math: The genius of Beethoven - Natalya St. Clair

Pre-K - Higher Ed
How is it that Beethoven, who is celebrated as one of the most significant composers of all time, wrote many of his most beloved songs while going deaf? The answer lies in the math behind his music. Natalya St. Clair employs the...
Instructional Video13:10
PBS

Solving the Wolverine Problem with Graph Coloring

12th - Higher Ed
At one time, Wolverine served on four different superhero teams. How did he do it? He may have used graph coloring.
Instructional Video8:30
TED Talks

TED: The link between inequality and anxiety | Richard Wilkinson

12th - Higher Ed
Why are global levels of anxiety and depression so high? Social epidemiologist Richard Wilkinson presents compelling data on the impact of inequality on mental health and social relationships in countries around the world. "Inequality,"...
Instructional Video19:37
3Blue1Brown

The three utilities puzzle with math/science YouTubers

12th - Higher Ed
A classic puzzle in graph theory, the "Utilities problem", a description of why it is unsolvable on a plane, and how it becomes solvable on surfaces with a different topology.
Instructional Video17:33
TED Talks

Geoffrey West: The surprising math of cities and corporations

12th - Higher Ed
Physicist Geoffrey West has found that simple, mathematical laws govern the properties of cities -- that wealth, crime rate, walking speed and many other aspects of a city can be deduced from a single number: the city's population. In...
Instructional Video10:03
PBS

Instant Insanity Puzzle

12th - Higher Ed
Imagine you have four cubes, whose faces are colored red, blue, yellow, and green. Can you stack these cubes so that each color appears exactly once on each of the four sides of the stack?
Instructional Video3:55
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Can you solve the control room riddle? - Dennis Shasha

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As your country's top spy, you must infiltrate the headquarters of the evil syndicate, find the secret control panel, and deactivate their death ray. But your reconnaissance team is spotty, and you have only limited information about the...
Instructional Video13:40
3Blue1Brown

Binary, Hanoi, and Sierpinski, part 2

12th - Higher Ed
How counting in Ternary can solve a variant of the Tower's of Hanoi puzzle, and how this gives rise to a beautiful connection to Sierpinski's triangle.
Instructional Video18:29
TED Talks

Clay Shirky: How the Internet will (one day) transform government

12th - Higher Ed
The open-source world has learned to deal with a flood of new, oftentimes divergent, ideas using hosting services like GitHub -- so why can’t governments? In this rousing talk Clay Shirky shows how democracies can take a lesson from the...
Instructional Video17:23
3Blue1Brown

Rediscovering Euler's formula with a mug (not that Euler's formula) - Part 4 of 4

12th - Higher Ed
A classic puzzle in graph theory, the "Utilities problem", a description of why it is unsolvable on a plane, and how it becomes solvable on surfaces with a different topology.
Instructional Video19:36
3Blue1Brown

Science YouTubers attempting a graph theory puzzle

12th - Higher Ed
A classic puzzle in graph theory, the "Utilities problem", a description of why it is unsolvable on a plane, and how it becomes solvable on surfaces with a different topology.
Instructional Video11:55
TED Talks

TED: What are the most important moral problems of our time? | Will MacAskill

12th - Higher Ed
Of all the problems facing humanity, which should we focus on solving first? In a compelling talk about how to make the world better, moral philosopher Will MacAskill provides a framework for answering this question based on the...
Instructional Video5:28
PBS

Space Used to Be Orange!!

12th - Higher Ed
As long as we've been around, YES. But the universe gets much more exciting, AND much BRIGHTER, as we start winding our clocks back to the early days of the universe. Near the beginning of the universe, when space was rapidly expanding,...
Instructional Video19:54
TED Talks

TED: How common threats can make common (political) ground | Jonathan Haidt

12th - Higher Ed
If an asteroid were headed for Earth, we'd all band together and figure out how to stop it, just like in the movies, right? And yet, when faced with major, data-supported, end-of-the-world problems in real life, too often we retreat into...
Instructional Video5:38
3Blue1Brown

Higher order derivatives | Footnote, Essence of calculus

12th - Higher Ed
What is the second derivative? Third derivative? How do you think about these?
Instructional Video5:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the virus riddle? - Lisa Winer

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Your research team has found a prehistoric virus preserved in the permafrost and isolated it for study. After a late night working, you're just closing up the lab when a sudden earthquake hits and breaks all the sample vials. Will you be...
Instructional Video14:16
TED Talks

Ben Goldacre: Battling bad science

12th - Higher Ed
Every day there are news reports of new health advice, but how can you know if they're right? Doctor and epidemiologist Ben Goldacre shows us, at high speed, the ways evidence can be distorted, from the blindingly obvious nutrition...