Instructional Video5:41
TED Talks

TED: Why skin disease is often misdiagnosed in darker skin tones | Jenna C. Lester

12th - Higher Ed
Skin is one of the most powerful predictors of health, yet nearly half of all new dermatologists admit to feeling uncomfortable identifying health issues on darker skin tones -- resulting in poorer health outcomes for patients of color....
Instructional Video10:25
Crash Course

The Economics of Healthcare: Crash Course Econ

12th - Higher Ed
Why is health care so expensive? Once again, there are a lot of factors in play. Jacob and Adriene look at the many reasons that health care in the US is so expensive, and what exactly we get for all that money. Spoiler alert: countries...
Instructional Video2:49
SciShow

Why Are Some Animal Babies So Helpless

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever noticed that some animal babies, like baby deer, can walk around basically right after they're born, but other animal babies, like kittens, can't even open their eyes? There’s a reason for that, and it comes down to two...
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

We May Have Found a New Organ, Thanks to Cancer Therapy

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve been studying the body for most of human history, and yet we are still finding new organs (or parts of them - depending on your definition). Also, thanks to some marmosets, we know a little more about how anxiety and depression...
Instructional Video9:34
TED Talks

TED: The inaccurate link between body ideals and health | Nancy N. Chen

12th - Higher Ed
Global obesity rates are on the rise, but body shaming campaigns are doing more harm than good, says medical anthropologist Nancy N. Chen. Reflecting on how the cultural histories of body ideals have changed over time, she offers a new...
Instructional Video10:21
TED Talks

TED: Why art thrives at Burning Man | Nora Atkinson

12th - Higher Ed
Craft curator Nora Atkinson takes us on a trip to Nevada's Black Rock Desert to see the beautifully designed and participatory art of Burning Man, revealing how she discovered there what's often missing from museums: curiosity and...
Instructional Video15:51
TED Talks

TED: How the US fails working parents -- and what they need to thrive | Reshma Saujani

12th - Higher Ed
The pandemic brought into sharp focus the crisis in caregiving in the United States, which woefully under provides support for parents. Activist and Girls Who Code founder Reshma Saujani has a proposal to address that -- something she...
Instructional Video5:03
TED Talks

LaToya Ruby Frazier: A visual history of inequality in industrial America

12th - Higher Ed
For the last 12 years, LaToya Ruby Frazier has photographed friends, neighbors and family in Braddock, Pennsylvania. But though the steel town has lately been hailed as a posterchild of "rustbelt revitalization," Frazier's pictures tell...
Instructional Video6:46
SciShow

Why Animals Take Care of Other Animals' Young

12th - Higher Ed
Did you know that some species take care of young that are not their own? This surprising practice is called alloparenting, and it’s been observed in animals from otters, like Rosa and Selka, to birds to baboons!
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

The Surprising Benefits of Watching Cute Cat Videos

12th - Higher Ed
If you are feeling stuck, you might get benefits to be better at the task by watching cute animal videos.
Instructional Video15:17
TED Talks

Elizabeth Howell: How we can improve maternal healthcare -- before, during and after pregnancy

12th - Higher Ed
Shocking, but true: the United States has the highest rate of deaths for new mothers of any developed country -- and 60 percent of them are preventable. With clarity and urgency, physician Elizabeth Howell explains the causes of maternal...
Instructional Video13:32
TED Talks

TED: What we can do to die well | Timothy Ihrig

12th - Higher Ed
The healthcare industry in America is so focused on pathology, surgery and pharmacology -- on what doctors "do" to patients -- that it often overlooks the values of the human beings it's supposed to care for. Palliative care physician...
Instructional Video12:45
TED Talks

TED: The creativity, innovation and ingenuity languishing in US prisons | Brittany K. Barnett

12th - Higher Ed
The freedom journey doesn't end when someone is released from prison. In many ways, it begins. Attorney and entrepreneur Brittany K. Barnett fights to free people from prison and champions restoring and nurturing the creative ingenuity...
Instructional Video7:12
TED Talks

TED: How to be a good ancestor | Roman Krznaric

12th - Higher Ed
Our descendants own the future, but the decisions and actions we make now will tremendously impact generations to come, says philosopher Roman Krznaric. From a global campaign to grant legal personhood to nature to a groundbreaking...
Instructional Video16:49
TED Talks

Norman Spack: How I help transgender teens become who they want to be

12th - Higher Ed
Puberty is an awkward time for just about everybody, but for transgender teens it can be a nightmare, as they grow overnight into bodies they aren't comfortable with. In a heartfelt talk, Norman Spack tells a personal story of how he...
Instructional Video7:29
TED Talks

Matthew A. Wilson: The health benefits of clowning around

12th - Higher Ed
As a medical clown, TED Resident Matthew A. Wilson takes the old adage that laughter is the best medicine very seriously. In this heartwarming talk, he shares glimpses of how clowning around can help patients (and medical staff) navigate...
Instructional Video11:31
TED Talks

TED: How ethics can help you make better decisions | Michael Schur

12th - Higher Ed
What would Immanuel Kant say about a fender bender? In a surprisingly funny trip through the teachings of some of history's great philosophers, TV writer and producer Michael Schur (from hit shows like "The Office" and "The Good Place")...
Instructional Video18:18
TED Talks

TED: A hero of the Congo forest | Corneille Ewango

12th - Higher Ed
Botanist Corneille Ewango talks about his work at the Okapi Faunal Reserve in the Congo Basin -- and his heroic work protecting it from poachers, miners and raging civil wars.
Instructional Video8:17
SciShow

9 Weird Ways Animals See the World

12th - Higher Ed
Eyes have been around for a long time, like... half a billion years or so... and in that time, animals have evolved lots of amazing ways to observe the world around them!
Instructional Video8:11
PBS

Inside the Dinosaur Library

12th - Higher Ed
We're back in Bozeman, Montana this week talking to Amy Atwater, Collections Manager at the Museum of the Rockies. MOR has among the largest collections of North American dinosaurs in the United States. We talk to Amy about her job and...
Instructional Video8:12
TED Talks

TED: Mental health care that disrupts cycles of violence | Celina de Sola

12th - Higher Ed
In Latin American countries like El Salvador, homicide rates are alarmingly high thanks in large part to a vicious cycle of violence -- people don't have a chance to heal from recurrent individual and collective trauma. With her team at...
Instructional Video11:36
TED Talks

TED: Why the hospital of the future will be your own home | Niels van Namen

12th - Higher Ed
Nobody likes going to the hospital, whether it's because of the logistical challenges of getting there, the astronomical costs of procedures or the alarming risks of complications like antibiotic-resistant bacteria. But what if we could...
Instructional Video2:55
SciShow

These Plants Are the Same Species

12th - Higher Ed
Sometimes the males and females of a species can look really different from each other. This is pretty common in animals (think peacocks), but there are some plant species out there with extreme sexual dimorphism! And now scientists...
Instructional Video5:09
SciShow

Bivalves Could Be the New Lab Rats

12th - Higher Ed
Bivalves—animals like mussels, clams and oysters—might be a more familiar sight in a restaurant than a lab. But it turns out that studying them might help us learn more about our own health.