Instructional Video8:30
MinuteEarth

How To Go Extinct

12th - Higher Ed
Our new evolution simulator reveals that extinction often happens when conditions change quickly.
Instructional Video8:51
PBS

Will Starshot's Insterstellar Journey Succeed?

12th - Higher Ed
Yuri Milner's Breakthrough Starshot is an interstellar travel expedition unlike any other before it. It's many years in the making and is contingent on a series of incredible advancements in nanotechnology, materials science and laser...
Instructional Video14:10
SciShow

Intergalactic Gardeners | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
Gardening doesn't need to be a hobby just here on Earth. In fact, it might help life outside of Earth quite a bit to take that pastime to the stars.
Instructional Video4:35
SciShow

Luna 16: The Mission That (Finally) Could

12th - Higher Ed
Before there was a rover named Perseverance, there was a series of missions that earned that name in their own right.
Instructional Video18:16
TED Talks

TED: Pop an ollie and innovate! | Rodney Mullen

12th - Higher Ed
Rodney Mullen is the godfather of street skating, and in this exuberant talk he shares his love of the open skateboarding community. He shows how the unique environments skaters play in drive the creation of new tricks -- fostering...
Instructional Video13:20
PBS

Can a Chess Piece Explain Markov Chains?

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode probability mathematics and chess collide. What is the average number of steps it would take before a randomly moving knight returned to its starting square?
Instructional Video5:17
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Harvey Milk's radical vision of equality - Lillian Faderman

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Learn about the life and tragic death of gay rights pioneer Harvey Milk, California’s first openly gay public official. -- By 1973, Harvey Milk had already been many things: naval officer, high school teacher, bit-part actor and...
Instructional Video2:50
SciShow

Skateboarding Science: Master the Ollie!

12th - Higher Ed
If most people got on a skateboard, they would roll forward slowly for a few feet, then fall down and break their wrists. But there are a proud few who can do some pretty amazing tricks on a board, and they use physics to pull them off....
Instructional Video4:25
SciShow

Landing on Europa!

12th - Higher Ed
NASA has proposed a mission that would land on Europa to search for signs of life & we've learned something sad about one of our neighbors, Proxima b.
Instructional Video6:12
SciShow

Can We Grow Plants On the Moon?

12th - Higher Ed
Despite how easy it looks in movies, growing plants on other planets is trickier than you might imagine.
Instructional Video6:43
TED Talks

TED: A Magna Carta for the web | Tim Berners-Lee

12th - Higher Ed
Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web 25 years ago. So it’s worth a listen when he warns us: There’s a battle ahead. Eroding net neutrality, filter bubbles and centralizing corporate control all threaten the web’s wide-open...
Instructional Video10:56
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Matter & Energy - Level 5 - Cycles and Flows

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on cycles and flows in matter and energy. Two examples are included in the video and two additional examples are included in the linked thinking slides. TERMS Cycling...
Instructional Video5:19
SciShow

The Hubble was Almost a $15B Disaster

12th - Higher Ed
The Hubble Space Telescope has been sending home images of the universe for more than thirty years, but none of its work would have been possible without the many servicing missions that kept it up to date.
Instructional Video9:40
TED Talks

TED: The power of purpose in business | Ashley M. Grice

12th - Higher Ed
What's a company's purpose? It's not the same as mission or vision, which change when leadership changes. Strategist Ashley M. Grice explains the power of purpose to push boundaries of innovation and bring clarity to every aspect of an...
Instructional Video10:24
Bozeman Science

Asking Scientific Questions

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how you can get your students asking more and better scientific questions. In this video Paul Andersen explains how scientific phenomenon and sensemaking can be used in the science classroom to engage...
Instructional Video4:34
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Brendan Constantine: "The Opposites Game"

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This animation is part of the TED-Ed series, "There's a Poem for That," which features animated interpretations of poems both old and new that give language to some of life's biggest feelings. [Poem by Brendan Constantine, directed by...
Instructional Video4:04
SciShow

Project Orion: The Spaceship Propelled By Nuclear Bombs

12th - Higher Ed
Before the Orion of today, the Orion of the 1950s was propelled by nuclear bombs exploding behind it.
Instructional Video4:57
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The incredible collaboration behind the International Space Station - Tien Nguyen

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The International Space Station is roughly the size of a six-bedroom house and weighs more than 320 cars -- it's so large that no single rocket could have lifted it into orbit. Instead, it was assembled piece by piece while hurtling...
Instructional Video10:57
PBS

The Misunderstood Nature of Entropy

12th - Higher Ed
Entropy is surely one of the most intriguing and misunderstood concepts in all of physics. The entropy of the universe must always increase - so says the second law of thermodynamics. It's a law that seems emergent from deeper laws -...
Instructional Video5:00
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Is time travel possible? - Colin Stuart

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Time travel is a staple of science fiction stories, but is it actually possible? It turns out nature does allow a way of bending time, an exciting possibility suggested by Albert Einstein when he discovered special relativity over one...
Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

How Doctors on Earth Stopped a Medical Emergency in Space

12th - Higher Ed
There was a medical incident on the ISS which required NASA to treat an astronaut from Earth. And astronomers have discovered what might be some of the universe’s earliest stars.
Instructional Video4:59
TED-Ed

TED-ED: Why do airlines sell too many tickets? - Nina Klietsch

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Have you ever sat in a doctor's office for hours, despite having an appointment? Has a hotel turned down your reservation because it's full? Have you been bumped off a flight that you paid for? These are all symptoms of overbooking, a...
Instructional Video11:06
TED Talks

TED: How diversity makes teams more innovative | Rocio Lorenzo

12th - Higher Ed
Are diverse companies really more innovative? Rocio Lorenzo and her team surveyed 171 companies to find out -- and the answer was a clear yes. In a talk that will help you build a better, more robust company, Lorenzo dives into the data...
Instructional Video4:37
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you solve the world’s most evil wizard riddle?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The evil wizard MoldeVort has been trying to kill you for years, and today it looks like he’s going to succeed. But your friends are on their way, and if you can survive until they arrive, they should be able to help stop him. Can you...