Instructional Video14:38
TED Talks

Paula Johnson: His and hers ... health care

12th - Higher Ed
Every cell in the human body has a sex, which means that men and women are different right down to the cellular level. Yet too often, research and medicine ignore this insight -- and the often startlingly different ways in which the two...
Instructional Video4:56
TED Talks

TED: Why doctors are offering free tax prep in their waiting rooms | Lucy Marcil

12th - Higher Ed
More than 90 percent of children in the US see a doctor at least once a year, which means countless hours spent in waiting rooms for parents. What if those hours could be used for something productive -- like saving money? Through her...
Instructional Video13:08
TED Talks

Stephen Burt: Why people need poetry

12th - Higher Ed
"We're all going to die -- and poems can help us live with that." In a charming and funny talk, literary critic Stephen Burt takes us on a lyrical journey with some of his favorite poets, all the way down to a line break and back up to...
Instructional Video3:06
SciShow

Darwin's Darlings: Meat-Eating Plants

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow describes the fascinating science of Darwin's little darlings: meat-eating plants. Learn about their many different types, how they catch and eat their prey, and how scientists think they evolved.
Instructional Video15:40
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: Writer Jeremy Smith, Measuring Health & Freya the Pine Snake

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode Hank talks about global medical history and recorded death certificates with journalist Jeremy Smith. Special guest from Animal Wonders and SciShow Kids Jessi Knudsen Castañeda brings Freya the Northern Pine Snake.
Instructional Video16:04
TED Talks

TED: What commercialization is doing to cannabis | Ben Cort

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. In 2012, Colorado legalized cannabis and added to what has fast become a multibillion-dollar global industry for...
Instructional Video10:44
TED Talks

TED: Addiction is a disease. We should treat it like one | Michael Botticelli

12th - Higher Ed
Only one in nine people in the united States gets the care and treatment they need for addiction and substance abuse. A former Director of National Drug Control Policy, Michael Botticelli is working to end this epidemic and treat people...
Instructional Video5:15
SciShow

Why Are COVID Fatality Rates Dropping?

12th - Higher Ed
Near the end of 2020, we got some puzzling but good news: COVID-19 fatality rates have been dropping. Here are a few factors that might help explain why we’re seeing this trend.
Instructional Video14:56
TED Talks

Alessandro Acquisti: What will a future without secrets look like?

12th - Higher Ed
The line between public and private has blurred in the past decade, both online and in real life, and Alessandro Acquisti is here to explain what this means and why it matters. In this thought-provoking, slightly chilling talk, he shares...
Instructional Video1:54
SciShow

Why Do Babies Smell So Good?

12th - Higher Ed
You may be familiar with it, that sweet comforting smell of new babies. So why do babies have this particular odor? Well, it has to do with psychology and a little bit of biology.
Instructional Video7:50
TED Talks

4 lessons the pandemic taught us about work, life and balance | Patty McCord

12th - Higher Ed
The COVID-19 pandemic changed the way we work for good. Can it also change it for the better? Consultant Patty McCord reviews four key insights employers and employees alike gleaned from their shift to working from home -- and shares how...
Instructional Video5:27
TED Talks

TED: The fascinating secret lives of giant clams | Mei Lin Neo

12th - Higher Ed
When you think about the deep blue sea, you might instantly think of whales or coral reefs. But spare a thought for giant clams, the world's largest living shellfish. These incredible creatures can live to 100, grow up to four and a half...
Instructional Video7:02
TED Talks

TED: The antidote to apathy | Dave Meslin

12th - Higher Ed
Local politics -- schools, zoning, council elections -- hit us where we live. So why don't more of us actually get involved? Is it apathy? Dave Meslin says no. He identifies 7 barriers that keep us from taking part in our communities,...
Instructional Video8:11
TED Talks

Akash Manoj: A life-saving device that detects silent heart attacks

12th - Higher Ed
You probably know the common symptoms of a heart attack: chest and arm pain, shortness of breath and fatigue. But there's another kind that's just as deadly and harder to detect because the symptoms are silent. In this quick talk,...
Instructional Video4:24
SciShow

Parasitic Wasps Found Inside 30 Million-Year-Old Flies | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
This week, definitive evidence that wasps were just as brutal millions of years ago as they are today, and some interesting effects caused by naked mole-rat poop.
Instructional Video13:27
TED Talks

Dolores Huerta: How to overcome apathy and find your power

12th - Higher Ed
"Sí, se puede!" -- "Yes, we can!" It's the rallying cry Dolores Huerta came up with as a young activist in the 1970s, and she's lived by it in her tireless pursuit of civil rights ever since. With her signature wit and humor, Huerta...
Instructional Video3:26
SciShow

Ice Quakes Your Brain on Pot & the Body Language of Victory

12th - Higher Ed
Hank enlightens you with the science behind the news, including the dynamics of recent "ice quakes," new insights into the neurology of marijuana, and the body language of victorious athletes. Winning!
Instructional Video24:56
TED Talks

Bill and Melinda Gates: Why giving away our wealth has been the most satisfying thing we've done

12th - Higher Ed
In 1993, Bill and Melinda Gates took a walk on the beach and made a big decision: to give their Microsoft wealth back to society. In conversation with Chris Anderson, the couple talks about their work at the Bill & Melinda Gates...
Instructional Video19:54
TED Talks

TED: How common threats can make common (political) ground | Jonathan Haidt

12th - Higher Ed
If an asteroid were headed for Earth, we'd all band together and figure out how to stop it, just like in the movies, right? And yet, when faced with major, data-supported, end-of-the-world problems in real life, too often we retreat into...
Instructional Video3:59
SciShow

Why Do We Have Such Long Childhoods?

12th - Higher Ed
Compared to most animals in the vast kingdom, humans have one of the longest childhoods. And you might think this is so we have time to develop our advanced thinking skills, but scientists think it might not be that simple.
Instructional Video19:37
SciShow

Saving Lives with Innovation: SciShow Talk Show

12th - Higher Ed
Hank talks with MacArthur Fellow Dr. Rebecca Richards-Kortum of Rice University who co-founded Beyond Traditional Borders: An interdisciplinary undergrad curriculum focused on solutions to global health problems.
Instructional Video20:45
TED Talks

Barry Schwartz: Our loss of wisdom

12th - Higher Ed
Barry Schwartz makes a passionate call for "practical wisdom" as an antidote to a society gone mad with bureaucracy. He argues powerfully that rules often fail us, incentives often backfire, and practical, everyday wisdom will help...
Instructional Video15:09
TED Talks

Marian Wright Edelman: Reflections from a lifetime fighting to end child poverty

12th - Higher Ed
What does it take to build a national movement? In a captivating conversation with TEDWomen curator Pat Mitchell, Marian Wright Edelman reflects on her path to founding the Children's Defense Fund in 1973 -- from the early influence of...
Instructional Video5:04
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Would you raise the bird that murdered your children? | Steve Rothstein

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A mother honeyguide has placed its chick into a bee-eater's nest— puncturing all the other eggs in the nest and leaving only its own hatching alive. Over the following weeks, the host parents devotedly care for the hatchling whose mother...