Instructional Video6:44
TED Talks

TED: A simple birth kit for mothers in the developing world | Zubaida Bai

12th - Higher Ed
TeD Fellow Zubaida Bai works with medical professionals, midwives and mothers to bring dignity and low-cost interventions to women's health care. In this quick, inspiring talk, she presents her clean birth kit in a purse, which contains...
Instructional Video5:38
TED Talks

TED: Inventing is the easy part. Marketing takes work | Daniel Schnitzer

12th - Higher Ed
Solar-powered LED lightbulbs could transform the lives of rural Haitians, but as Daniel Schnitzer found, they don't simply sell themselves. At TEDxPittsburgh, he shows how smart health and energy products for the developing world are...
Instructional Video4:48
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Where will you be able to live in 20 years? | Carol Farbotko and Ingrid Boas

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Humanity has always adapted to changing weather and moved to regions that best support cultural lifestyles and livelihoods. However, the rise in extreme weather is endangering coastal communities, and even for those with the resources to...
Instructional Video6:33
TED Talks

Andrew Bastawrous: Get your next eye exam on a smartphone

12th - Higher Ed
Thirty-nine million people in the world are blind, and the majority lost their sight due to curable and preventable diseases. But how do you test and treat people who live in remote areas, where expensive, bulky eye equipment is hard to...
Instructional Video3:59
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The secret lives of baby fish - Amy McDermott

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Coral reef fish, like the yellow tang surgeonfish, begin life in a fascinating and weird way - as tiny floating larvae! These babies are capable of drifting thousands of miles on ocean currents, far from the reefs where they were born....
Instructional Video12:35
TED Talks

TED: How film created hope after the Beirut port explosion | Mounia Akl

12th - Higher Ed
When Lebanon was rocked by a massive explosion at the port of Beirut, filmmaker Mounia Akl came face-to-face with chaos -- and the power of art to create some sense of order. In this poetic, moving talk, Akl shares the story of how she...
Instructional Video14:14
TED Talks

TED: Don't feel sorry for refugees -- believe in them | Luma Mufleh

12th - Higher Ed
We have seen advances in every aspect of our lives -- except our humanity, says Luma Mufleh, a Jordanian immigrant and Muslim of Syrian descent who founded the first accredited school for refugees in the United States. Mufleh shares...
Instructional Video10:01
SciShow

We Can't Live Without You | Synanthropic Animals

12th - Higher Ed
From the spider in the corner of your house, to the moths in your attic, synanthropic species don't just live among us, they literally depend on us to live. Chapters View all synanthropic species 0:34 1 COMMON HOUSE SPIDERS 2:14 PURPLE...
Instructional Video15:10
TED Talks

TED: A child of the state | Lemn Sissay

12th - Higher Ed
Literature has long been fascinated with fostered, adopted and orphaned children, from Moses to Cinderella to Oliver Twist to Harry Potter. So why do many parentless children feel compelled to hide their pasts? Poet and playwright Lemn...
Instructional Video6:11
TED Talks

TED: How to revitalize a neighborhood -- without gentrification | Bree Jones

12th - Higher Ed
The housing market can be vexing: while some neighborhoods get ridiculously expensive and price out longtime residents, others have historic homes sitting vacant without demand. Equitable housing developer and TED Fellow Bree Jones...
Instructional Video23:28
TED Talks

Cameron Sinclair: My wish: A call for open-source architecture

12th - Higher Ed
Accepting his 2006 TED Prize, Cameron Sinclair demonstrates how passionate designers and architects can respond to world housing crises. He unveils his TED Prize wish for a network to improve global living standards through collaborative...
Instructional Video13:07
TED Talks

Parul Sehgal: An ode to envy

12th - Higher Ed
What is jealousy? What drives it, and why do we secretly love it? No study has ever been able to capture its "loneliness, longevity, grim thrill" -- that is, says Parul Sehgal, except for fiction. In an eloquent meditation she scours...
Instructional Video8:38
TED Talks

TED: Why I put myself in danger to tell the stories of Gaza | Ameera Harouda

12th - Higher Ed
When Ameera Harouda hears the sounds of bombs or shells, she heads straight towards them. "I want to be there first because these stories should be told," says Gaza's first female "fixer," a role that allows her to guide journalists into...
Instructional Video9:32
Crash Course

The Biggest Problems We're Facing Today & The Future of Engineering: Crash Course Engineering #46

12th - Higher Ed
In our final episode of Crash Course Engineering we are going to take all the tools and ideas we’ve discussed throughout this series and try to imagine where we’re headed. We’re going to explore some of the biggest problems that today’s...
Instructional Video4:55
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: David Ian Howe: A brief history of dogs

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Since their emergence over 200,000 years ago, modern humans have established communities all over the planet. But they didn't do it alone. Whatever corner of the globe you find humans in today, you're likely to find another species as...
Instructional Video10:15
TED Talks

TED: How cohousing can make us happier (and live longer) | Grace Kim

12th - Higher Ed
Loneliness doesn't always stem from being alone. For architect Grace Kim, loneliness is a function of how socially connected we feel to the people around us -- and it's often the result of the homes we live in. She shares an age-old...
Instructional Video6:15
TED Talks

TED: How can we escape soaring energy bills? Stop using fossil fuels | Tessa Khan

12th - Higher Ed
As oil and gas companies continue to make record profits off of the same forces driving climate chaos, war and soaring energy bills, it's become clear that boom times for the fossil fuel industry are bad times for the rest of us, says...
Instructional Video5:16
TED Talks

TED: The renewable heating system right below your feet | Kathy Hannun

12th - Higher Ed
Of all the mundane yet astonishing marvels of human ingenuity, knowing what it takes to heat a room to a comfortable temperature is TED Fellow Kathy Hannun's favorite. She takes us on a journey across the planet and under the sea to...
Instructional Video5:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What does it mean to be a refugee? - Benedetta Berti and Evelien Borgman

Pre-K - Higher Ed
About 60 million people around the globe have been forced to leave their homes to escape war, violence and persecution. The majority have become Internally Displaced Persons, meaning they fled their homes but are still in their own...
Instructional Video12:35
TED Talks

TED: To learn is to be free | Shameem Akhtar

12th - Higher Ed
Shameem Akhtar posed as a boy during her early childhood in Pakistan so she could enjoy the privileges Pakistani girls are rarely afforded: to play outside and attend school. In an eye-opening, personal talk, Akhtar recounts how the...
Instructional Video10:07
TED Talks

TED: Meet the microscopic life in your home -- and on your face | Anne Madden

12th - Higher Ed
Behold the microscopic jungle in and around you: tiny organisms living on your cheeks, under your sofa and in the soil in your backyard. We have an adversarial relationship with these microbes -- we sanitize, exterminate and disinfect...
Instructional Video5:11
SciShow

How Bad Helmets Gave Us a Map of Vision

12th - Higher Ed
The Brodie helmet, widely used during the first World War, had some serious design flaws, . But thanks to those flaws we now have a staggeringly accurate map of the brain.
Instructional Video3:26
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why the shape of your screen matters - Brian Gervase

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Watching a movie at home isn't quite the same experience as seeing it at a movie theater -- but why? Learn how changes in aspect ratio affect every film, and why your television might not be delivering the whole picture.
Instructional Video5:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you outsmart the fallacy that fooled a generation of doctors? | Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It's 1843, and a debate is raging about one of the most common killers of women: childbed fever— no one knows what causes it. One physician has observed patients with inflammation go on to develop childbed fever, and therefore believes...