Instructional Video9:34
Crash Course

The Bobo Beatdown - Crash Course Psychology

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode of Crash Course Psychology, Hank talks about how we learn by observation... and how that can mean beating the tar out of an inanimate clown named Bobo. -- Table of Contents Limitations of Classical and Operant...
Instructional Video5:56
Bozeman Science

LS1D - Information Processing

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how information is processed in in animals. He starts by describing the different forms of information and how they are received by receptors. He explains how information is received by the brain and...
Instructional Video14:09
Crash Course

Modern Life: Crash Course European History

12th - Higher Ed
So, "modern" is kind of a loaded term, but today we're going to talk about modern life in Europe, as it looked around the time the 19th century turned into the 20th. We'll look at what life was like in the rapidly growing urban centers...
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

This Material Is Nearly Uncuttable

12th - Higher Ed
European researchers claim to have developed a composite material that is basically uncuttable, so with this material, your bike might never be stolen.
Instructional Video4:21
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: A day in the life of an Aztec midwife

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The midwife Xoquauhtli has a difficult choice to make. She owes a debt to her patron Teteoinnan, the female warrior goddess at the center of the Aztec seasonal festival, who must be kept happy or she will bring bad luck. Xoquauhtli...
Instructional Video13:01
TED Talks

TED: Why museums are returning cultural treasures | Chip Colwell

12th - Higher Ed
Archaeologist and curator Chip Colwell collects artifacts for his museum, but he also returns them to where they came from. In a thought-provoking talk, he shares how some museums are confronting their legacies of stealing spiritual...
Instructional Video9:21
TED Talks

TED: A bold plan to protect 30 percent of the Earth's surface and ocean floor | Enric Sala

12th - Higher Ed
As a diver in the 1970s, marine ecologist Enric Sala saw once-lush oceanscapes reduced to underwater deserts -- but later, in marine preserves across the globe, he also witnessed the ocean's power to rejuvenate itself when left to its...
Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

Why Are There So Many Beetles

12th - Higher Ed
Beetles are the most diverse group of complex organisms on Earth, making up over 20% of all named animal species. One in five species on this planet is...a beetle. How did one group of organisms get THAT massive?
Instructional Video4:20
TED-Ed

The "myth" of the boiling frog | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Since 1850, global average temperatures have risen by 1 degree Celsius. That may not sound like a lot, but it is. Why? 1 degree is an average. Many places have already gotten much warmer and if average temperatures increase one more...
Instructional Video19:06
SciShow

Antarctic Lava to Pink Snow: The Science of Winter

12th - Higher Ed
"If you live in the northern hemisphere, there's a decent chance you're in a winter wonderland right now. Settle in with a hot drink for this winter compilation and learn about some of the interesting things that make winter wondrous!
Instructional Video11:03
TED Talks

TED: How I learned to read -- and trade stocks -- in prison | Curtis "Wall Street" Carroll

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. Financial literacy isn't a skill -- it's a lifestyle. Take it from Curtis "Wall Street" Carroll. As an incarcerated...
Instructional Video17:35
SciShow Kids

Squeaks Gets Scared! | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
There's a big thunderstorm happening where Squeaks lives, and it's making the Fort kind of creepy... Join Squeaks as he faces his fears and learns more about the things that scare him!
Instructional Video4:49
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How art can help you analyze - Amy E. Herman

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Can art save lives? Not exactly, but our most prized professionals (doctors, nurses, police officers) can learn real world skills through art analysis. Studying art like Rene Magritte's Time Transfixed can enhance communication and...
Instructional Video11:35
SciShow

5 Times Evolution Should Have Planned Ahead

12th - Higher Ed
Natural selection can lead to some pretty amazing adaptations, but sometimes the resulting traits aren’t the most efficient solutions to the problems at hand. With the bar set to “good enough,” here are some features that arose from...
Instructional Video13:23
Crash Course

Ma'ui, Oceania's Hero: Crash Course World Mythology

12th - Higher Ed
In which Mike Rugnetta teaches you about Ma'ui, prominent hero of many cultures in Oceania, aka the Pacific Island nations. Ma'ui is just the kind of hero we're interested in here at Crash Course. He's a culture hero, he's a an...
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 Video17:31
SciShow Kids

Squeaks Takes a Hike! | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
It's a beautiful day, so Squeaks is going to go on a hike! And he's bringing his trusty field journal so he can take notes on all of the plants and animals he sees along the way!
Instructional Video5:22
SciShow Kids

Mysterious Trilobites! | The History of Life! | SciShow Kids

K - 5th
Squeaks and Mister Brown pretend to go back in time to learn more about Trilobites, using special clues from fossils! Second Grade Next Generation Science Standards Crosscutting Concepts Patterns: Observed patterns in nature guide...
Instructional Video6:38
Bozeman Science

Natural Ecosystem Change

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how the Earth's climate will natural change due to interactions between the Sun and Earth, volcanism, and plate tectonics. Species may go extinct leading to adaptive radiation or may move to a...
Instructional Video12:23
Crash Course

Retrosynthesis and Liquid-Liquid Extraction: Crash Course Organic Chemistry

12th - Higher Ed
As we construct more complex organic molecules, it can start to feel like decrypting a complex code. Organic synthesis takes simple starting materials, and turns them into complex structures, and reverse engineering can help us figure...
Instructional Video6:59
SciShow Kids

Bugs Aren’t Brainless! | Storytime: Charles Henry Turner

K - 5th
Did you know that bees can remember things? It's true, and it's thanks to Dr. Charles Henry Turner that we know so much about insects!
Instructional Video27:46
SciShow

Psychology Hacks to Help Your New Year's Resolutions | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
It's time to ring in the new year, so lots of people are ready to make their new year's resolutions. With the help of psychology, you too can be on your way to fulfilling your goals this year!
Instructional Video3:12
SciShow

Weird Places: The Bay of Fundy

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow takes you on a tour of Canada's Bay of Fundy, home of the largest tidal range in the world.
Instructional Video7:49
PBS

The Higgs Mechanism Explained

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum Field Theory is generally accepted as an accurate description of the subatomic universe. However until recently this theory had one giant hole in it. The particles it describes had no mass!