Instructional Video5:50
Curated Video

Emotions and the Brain: What is the limbic system?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The limbic system is the term for various parts of the brain involved in emotions such as fear, aggression, and attraction, and behaviors related to these emotions, as well as memory, learning, and senses. The four important parts of the...
Instructional Video5:19
Curated Video

What Are Asteroids And Where Do They Come From?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Asteroids are small, rocky objects that orbit the sun, just like the rest of the planets and celestial bodies in our solar system. Although asteroids are present throughout the solar system, most of them live in the asteroid belt—a...
Instructional Video4:02
Curated Video

Why is a Circle 360 Degrees, Why Not a Simpler Number, like 100?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A circle is 360 degrees But have you ever thought why is a circle not a simpler number, like 10 degrees or 100 degrees? As it turns out 360 is actually a very good number. From a purely mathematical standpoint, a number like 10 or 100...
Instructional Video4:57
Curated Video

Why Do We Dance To Music?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Why do we dance? We dance to music because of neural connections in our brain. These connections link the part that perceives music, the auditory cortex to the regions that help us move, the motor regions. We might have started creating...
Instructional Video3:53
Curated Video

Giganotosaurus vs. T Rex: Who Was The Deadliest Predator?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Tyrannosaurus Rex is, without a doubt, one of the coolest out of all the dinosaurs. With its enormous size, speed, and killer power, it’s hard to deny that it was ferocious, fierce, and beautiful. Well, at least as long as beauty is...
Instructional Video2:21
Makematic

Story surprises

K - 5th
"Stories spark listeners’ curiosity and help children aged 3-7 understand the difference between fiction and non-fiction. Children become engaged when they use their creative ideas to change familiar stories. In this activity, children...
Instructional Video3:21
Curated Video

What Do Moths Eat?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Moth Food: In their primal phase, moths possess chewing organs that they use to chew just about anything in their proximity. This includes hair, fur, furniture, paper dust, and materials composed of oil and wool.
Instructional Video6:41
Curated Video

Multiverse Theory Explained: Does the Multiverse Really Exist? Truth of Multiple Realities

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Multiverse theory suggests that our universe, which consists of billions and billions of planets, stars and galaxies and extends out tens of billions of light-years, may not be the only universe that exists. There could be another...
Instructional Video3:34
Science ABC

Why Some People Just Can’t Sing Well, No Matter How Hard They Try!

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The element that causes some people to sing well and others to sing badly are problems with pitch accuracy, also known as intonation. Pitch can be understood as the ‘sharpness’ of a voice; the higher the pitch, the sharper and shriller...
Instructional Video6:02
Curated Video

Particle accelerators: What are they, how do they work and why are they important to us?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A particle accelerator is a machine that accelerates particles. More specifically, it accelerates elementary particles, like protons and electrons, at extremely high speeds—almost 99.99% of the speed of light. These particles are then...
Instructional Video6:07
Curated Video

Why Venus and Mercury have no Moons?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Mercury and Venus have no moons because of their close proximity to the Sun. Any moon orbiting around them is likely be swallowed by the mammoth gravitational pull of the mighty Sun. All planets except for Mercury and Venus have moons....
Instructional Video3:07
Curated Video

The Doorway Effect: Why Do We Forget What We Were Supposed To Do After We Enter a Room?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Doorway Effect: Psychologists believe that walking through a door and entering another room creates a “mental blockage” in the brain, meaning that walking through open doors resets memory to make room for a new episode to emerge. This is...
Instructional Video1:16
Next Animation Studio

NASA finds possible clue for life on early Mars

12th - Higher Ed
NASA’s Curiosity rover found organic compounds called thiophenes in soil samples that may have been produced by bacteria.
Instructional Video3:32
Curated Video

What Are Cobwebs? Where Do They Come From?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Most cobwebs actually consist of abandoned spider webs. These home-abandoning spiders, mainly those of the species Theridiidae, build these sticky webs for catching prey. Web-building spiders create elaborate webs for catching prey...
Instructional Video5:22
Curated Video

Why Are Planetary Orbits Elliptical?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Planetary orbits are elliptical because gravitational interaction over time changes the delicate balance of mass, velocity and distance from the star which otherwise keeps planetary orbit circular. For a very long time, from Ptolemy to...
Instructional Video10:06
Curated Video

Quantum Entanglement: Explained in REALLY SIMPLE Words

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Quantum entanglement is a physical resource, like energy, that is possible between quantum systems. When a coin spins on a flat surface, it’s in a state of superposition between its two faces—head and tails. Similarly, electrons in their...
Instructional Video3:32
Curated Video

Does Not Wearing Glasses Make Your Eyes Worse?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you need glasses, but don’t wear them, does your eyesight get worse? Not necessarily. Corrective glasses help to compensate for a mismatch in the corneal shape of the people who need them, which helps them see clearly and reduces...
Instructional Video4:04
Curated Video

Are Zebras Black with White Stripes or White with Black Stripes?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Zebras are actually black with white stripes. All animals get their colors from pigments called melanin which are of two kinds - eumelanin gives a black to brown color which pheomelanin gives reddish to yellow hues. The cells that create...
Instructional Video10:49
Curated Video

How Scientifically Accurate Is The HBO Miniseries Chernobyl?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Chernobyl is an HBO mini-series that reintroduced the world to the nuclear catastrophe that occurred on April 26th, 1986 at the Chernobyl nuclear reactor in the Soviet Union, in what is now Ukraine. The series followed the tragedy that...
Instructional Video7:01
Curated Video

Gasoline (Petrol) vs Diesel: Which one is better? A Beginner’s Guide

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Gasoline (petrol) and diesel are extracted from the same raw material – crude oil—and pass through various levels of refinement. Yet, they have different thermal characteristics, making them suitable for very different purposes. For...
Instructional Video2:59
Curated Video

Why Can’t You Clench Your Fist Right After Waking Up?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When you wake up, it takes some time to get the electrolytes flowing through the muscles in your hands again. That’s why you may not be able to make a fist right after waking up. This effect is more pronounced if you don’t wake up...
Instructional Video3:19
Curated Video

How Does Temperature Regulation In An Electric Iron Work?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The working of an electric iron is very simple – it draws electricity from the mains and heats a coil inside. This heat is then transferred to the bottom plate, which is pressed against the clothing to remove wrinkles. It is the...
Instructional Video5:29
Curated Video

The Reggio Emelia Approach: A Child-Centered Model of Education

Higher Ed
This video describes the Reggio Amelia approach to education, which was developed in response to the tragedy of World War Two. The approach emphasizes the development of creativity and social skills, with teachers stepping aside to let...
Instructional Video6:19
Curated Video

What is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle: Explained in Simple Words

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle says that if we know everything about where a particle is located, we know nothing about its momentum. Conversely, if we know everything about its momentum, then we know nothing about where the particle...