Instructional Video20:42
TED Talks

TED: Ideas change everything — and what's next for TED | Chris Anderson and Monique Ruff-Bell

12th - Higher Ed
TED is on a mission to discover and champion the ideas that will shape tomorrow. Reflecting on the evolution of that mission, TED's Chris Anderson and Monique Ruff-Bell cast a visionary gaze on the organization's future — including a...
Instructional Video7:03
TED Talks

TED: A new national park to reclaim Indigenous land | Tracie Revis

12th - Higher Ed
In a part of the United States with more than 17,000 years of human history, cultural preservation advocate Tracie Revis is working to turn the Ocmulgee Mounds into Georgia's first national park and preserve. This park would be...
Instructional Video4:52
TED Talks

TED: What working parents really need from workplaces | Angela Garbes

12th - Higher Ed
What if we started treating parenting like the real work it is? Podcast host and CEO Angela Garbes details how working families have evolved -- and how companies haven't -- and gives insight into what parents really need from their...
Instructional Video4:44
SciShow

Why Do Our Noses Stick Out?

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever thought about why we humans have noses that stick out? Turns out, there's been a big story about human evolution right... under your nose.
Instructional Video8:40
SciShow

The Rarest Objects in The Solar System Are from...Elsewhere...

12th - Higher Ed
In 2017, astronomers discovered 'Oumuamua — the first definitive interstellar visitor to our solar system. But definitive evidence of space rocks that don't just visit but join our solar system is a little more elusive.
Instructional Video8:07
SciShow

How Do We Figure Out The Sex ... Of A Fossil?

12th - Higher Ed
We know a lot about fossils, but there's one thing about all those long-dead organisms that's hard to figure out -- their sex. So let's talk about the ways we can try to determine whether those T. rex bones came from a male or a female,...
Instructional Video11:59
SciShow

The Alien Storm That Ate Itself

12th - Higher Ed
From cyclones to snowstorms, Earth is home to some spectacular weather events. But they're nothing compared to what you can find on the other planets in our solar system. Magnetic tornadoes? Ammonia mushballs? Let's (not literally) dive...
Instructional Video6:56
SciShow

Retinal Scanning is Changing Healthcare

12th - Higher Ed
Your optometrist can tell you if you're at risk for cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer's, or diabetes. And it's all thanks to James Bond-style retinal scanners.
Instructional Video12:46
SciShow

Is Liquid Nitrogen the Future of Clean Energy?

12th - Higher Ed
Liquid nitrogen (LN2) might slow down a T1000 for a bit, and it definitely helps make yummy ice cream during a classroom demo, but it has a lot of applications you may have never considered. Maybe one day it'll help astronauts stay...
Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

The Rock That's Helping Us Find the Origin of Life

12th - Higher Ed
Epidote might just look like a pretty little crystal, but it has a secret. thanks to the high-pressure circumstances where it forms, we can use it to help us uncover the origins of life on our planet, and maybe even find signs of life on...
Instructional Video7:23
SciShow

How Pandas Got Such a Bad Reputation

12th - Higher Ed
Look, we've all heard the rumors that giant pandas are an evolutionary dead end. But we are here to set the record straight and show you that these adorable fluff balls are a lot tougher than they seem.
Instructional Video6:39
SciShow

The Rare Disorder That Turns Everyone Else Into Demons

12th - Higher Ed
Prosopometamorphopsia is an extremely rare disorder of facial processing that makes other people's faces look demonic or seem to melt. But in the process of treating these people, we can also learn how our brain understands what a face...
Instructional Video12:51
SciShow

The Surprisingly Useful Physics of Desk Toys

12th - Higher Ed
How do Newton's Cradles connect to cancer treatments? Let's unpack the physics of some of our favorite desk toys, from dippy birds to perpetual motion machines, and explore how these scientific principles can be used beyond an office desk.
Instructional Video5:55
SciShow

When Did We Start Getting Cavities?

12th - Higher Ed
You would think that without dentists and fluoride mouthwash, early humans would have terrible teeth. But tooth decay depends on access to sugars and starches -- meaning most early humans had decent teeth up until the Agricultural...
Instructional Video13:01
SciShow

The World's Oldest Recipes

12th - Higher Ed
If you could throw a potluck with all the oldest foods in the world, what would you bring? We asked ourselves that question and prepared a menu of tasty snacks for you to consider, from tamales and noodles to our favorite ancient boozes....
Instructional Video14:12
TED Talks

TED: The human cost of coal mining in China | Xiaojun "Tom" Wang

12th - Higher Ed
Xiaojun "Tom" Wang grew up in the Chinese province of Shanxi, the world's largest coal producer. Each year, more than a billion tons of coal are dug out of Shanxi's mountains, and the impacts are devastating — from massive landslides to...
Instructional Video19:58
TED Talks

TED: How film changes the way we see the world | Ava DuVernay

12th - Higher Ed
People told me this was an unadaptable book, so the only logical thing to do was to try to adapt it, says writer, producer and filmmaker Ava DuVernay of her work taking the award-winning title "Caste" from page to screen. In conversation...
Instructional Video6:23
TED Talks

TED: Your invitation to help build a sustainable future | Jim Snabe

12th - Higher Ed
If we want to avoid a climate disaster, we need much more radical leadership, says Jim Snabe, who knows a thing or two about leadership as chairman of the world's largest maritime shipping company. In a stirring talk, he encourages...
Instructional Video11:38
TED Talks

TED: The 5 tenets of turning pain into power | Christine Schuler Deschryver

12th - Higher Ed
A supportive community is the key to cultivating resilience and unlocking healing. Sharing the story of a transformative recovery program for survivors of sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, human rights activist...
Instructional Video12:11
TED Talks

TED: How to design for dignity during times of war | Slava Balbek

12th - Higher Ed
What happens when architecture meets empathy? Through the challenges of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, architect and humanitarian Slava Balbek, who volunteers part-time on the front lines, highlights the importance of designing for...
Instructional Video11:26
TED Talks

TED: Life's an obstacle course — here's how to navigate it | Maryam Banikarim

12th - Higher Ed
Instead of seeing life's challenges as obstacles, I see them as an obstacle course — a fascinating array of tests that I'm curious to see if I can pass, says community builder Maryam Banikarim. Telling the story of her experience...
Instructional Video12:12
TED Talks

TED: My mission to change the narrative of mental health | Glenn Close

12th - Higher Ed
Legendary actor and mental health advocate Glenn Close is on a quest to change how we think about mental health, starting with her decision to speak out about her own family's struggles — a brave choice considering the stigma that...
Instructional Video3:31
MinutePhysics

How Do Bikes Stay Up?

12th - Higher Ed
Learn the about the physics that allows bikes to stay upright and in motion, even without a rider.
News Clip7:24
PBS

Why a growing number of American men say they are in a ‘friendship recession’

12th - Higher Ed
American men are stuck in what’s been dubbed a friendship recession, with 20 percent of single men now saying they don’t have any close friends. More than half of all men report feeling unsatisfied with the size of their friend groups....