Instructional Video12:00
TED Talks

TED: The massive machines cleaning Earth's atmosphere | Jan Wurzbacher

12th - Higher Ed
To restrain global warming, we know we need to drastically reduce pollution. The very next step after that: using both natural and technological solutions to trap as much excess carbon dioxide from the air as possible. Enter Orca, the...
Instructional Video14:07
TED Talks

TED: An Indigenous perspective on humanity's survival on Earth | Jupta Itoewaki

12th - Higher Ed
Eighty percent of the world's biodiversity is within Indigenous territories, yet these communities often don't have a say when it comes to protecting the lands they inhabit. Environmental activist Jupta Itoewaki explains why Indigenous...
Instructional Video10:26
TED Talks

TED: Gourmet food for the final frontier | Phnam Bagley

12th - Higher Ed
What does an in-flight meal look like when you're traveling to Mars? Designer Phnam Bagley envisions a future where astronauts have nourishing, flavorful food reminiscent of home -- a giant leap from their current staple of...
Instructional Video10:39
TED Talks

TED: 3 steps to build peace and create meaningful change | Georgette Bennett

12th - Higher Ed
As the child of Holocaust survivors and a World War II refugee herself, peace builder Georgette Bennett was stunned by the human toll and tragedy of the Syrian civil war. She got to work, bringing together historical enemies to build an...
Instructional Video9:27
TED Talks

TED: The fascinating physics of insect pee | Saad Bhamla

12th - Higher Ed
Scientist Saad Bhamla is on a mission to answer a question most people don't think to ask: How do insects pee? Taking inspiration from the incredible "butt flickers" of the glassy-winged sharpshooter, Bhamla presents a fascinating study...
News Clip7:08
PBS

Theater in rural Appalachian Virginia brings regional themes to the stage

12th - Higher Ed
Barter Theatre, which opened during the Great Depression and is thriving 90 years later, is known for bringing regional themes to its rural Appalachian stage. Jeffrey Brown visited Abingdon, Virginia, to show the changing face of the...
News Clip6:08
PBS

Aging Maine repays college debts to attract younger workers

12th - Higher Ed
Maine, land of lobsters and lighthouses, is also the nation's oldest state. With a median age of 43, roughly a third of its population is in or approaching retirement. To counter its aging workforce, the state is attempting to attract...
News Clip8:24
News Clip6:54
PBS

How This Thai Educational Movement Empowers Rural Students

12th - Higher Ed
More and more in Thailand, rural students learn in traditional classrooms, but with an emphasis on hands-on activities. The idea is to empower young villagers to bring economic development to their communities, as well as learn...
News Clip4:40
PBS

Migrants Left Adrift At Sea After Boat Pushback From Greek Coast Guard

12th - Higher Ed
Pro-refugee groups allege the Greek coast guard is endangering migrants in the Aegean Sea and breaching international law with a new aggressive migration policy that involves pushing them back towards Turkish waters. Critics also accuse...
News Clip6:09
PBS

Inmates get federal grants for higher ed in experimental progam

12th - Higher Ed
In a pilot project announced this summer, the Department of Education will partner with dozens of colleges to provide higher education to prisoners who can't afford to pay; eligible inmates will be able to apply for federal grants under...
News Clip8:14
PBS

Inequities In Care, Misinformation Fuel Covid Deaths Among Poor, Indigenous Brazilians

12th - Higher Ed
All across Brazil, slums — known as Favelas — have long been places of crime and poverty, marked by overcrowding and unsanitary conditions. They are among the hardest hit by the pandemic, in a country where the death toll just passed...
News Clip3:30
PBS

Two Students' Brief But Spectacular Takes On Race And Being Underestimated

12th - Higher Ed
Shortly before the pandemic, NewsHour traveled to Georgia and spoke with two high school seniors, Audrey McNeal and Shaylon Walker. Now in their first year of college, here's their Brief But Spectacular takes on race and being...
News Clip9:53
PBS

A community overwhelmed by opioids

12th - Higher Ed
At the epicenter of America's opioid epidemic, Huntington, West Virginia’s growing addiction problem has overwhelmed everyone from first responders to business owners to newborns. So far, the city's robust efforts to fight back...
News Clip6:28
PBS

U.S. Troops Suicide

12th - Higher Ed
Suicides by active duty U.S. troops last year exceeded the number of servicemen and women killed in combat in Afghanistan. Ray Suarez talks to psychiatrist and retired U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Stephen Xenakis, who says more than half of the...
News Clip3:43
PBS

Going home after Harvey and realizing you've lost everything

12th - Higher Ed
Thousands of storm victims are making their way back home as the skies in Houston clear and the water recedes. Assessing the damage will be the start of a long road toward recovery. William Brangham takes us into the homes of families...
News Clip7:33
PBS

Uneasy Peace Takes Hold In Contested Region Of Azerbaijan

12th - Higher Ed
Ethnic-Armenian forces last week handed over two regions to Azerbaijani control as part of Russia-brokered armistice that ended the six-week war over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Moscow has sent peacekeepers to the ethnic-Armenian...
News Clip8:38
PBS

What one ass't principal learned from shadowing a student

12th - Higher Ed
Karen Ritter, an assistant principal at a high school just outside of Chicago, wanted to see her school through a student's eyes. So she decided to follow 9th grader Alan Garcia, who came to her asking to be switched out of the many...
News Clip3:18
Curated Video

JP Morgan agrees $13 billion settlement with government - said to be biggest ever

Higher Ed
JPMorgan Chase & Co. has agreed to pay 13 billion dollars in a landmark settlement after it acknowledged that it misled investors about the quality of risky mortgage-backed securities ahead of the 2008 financial crisis. The...
News Clip4:32
PBS

Nicodemus Kansas

12th - Higher Ed
The wave of migration across the U.S. in the mid-1800's included people looking to live in open spaces, with land to grow crops and the opportunity to have a better life. After the Civil War, that included freed slaves and their...
News Clip6:31
Curated Video

Jessica Jung, Emily Ratajkowski, Maria Sharapova, Chloe Sevigny, Simone Biles, Cynthia Erivo attend Vera Wang fashion show

Higher Ed
SHOTLIST:RESTRICTION SUMMARY:CLIENTS PLEASE NOTE: THE MUSIC USED IN THIS RUNWAY SHOW HAS NOT BEEN CLEARED FOR USE. WE RECOMMEND YOU REPLACE IT WITH YOUR OWN CLEARED MUSIC.COMMERCIAL MUSIC, MUSIC VIDEO AND OR PERFORMANCES, MUST BE CLEARED...
News Clip3:40
PBS

Why a grandmother and grandson are visiting every U.S. national park

12th - Higher Ed
92-year-old Joy Ryan and her grandson Brad Ryan have spent the past seven years crisscrossing the U.S. with the goal of visiting every national park. “Grandma Joy’s Road Trip,” as they call it on social media, began after Brad found out...
News Clip6:45
Curated Video

UN warns that Nigeria on the brink of famine

Higher Ed
The United Nations has warned that if the international community and Nigerian authorities don't address an ongoing humanitarian crisis in the country there would be a large-scale famine.Speaking in Brussels on Thursday, Toby Lanzer, the...
News Clip6:17
Curated Video

Wearable cape turns red in polluted areas

Higher Ed
LEAD IN: A cape which flashes through the light spectrum to warn that you are breathing in pollution has been created by an artist for a campaign to raise awareness of the problem.STORY-LINE:This is the "Human Sensor".Part art and part...