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Instructional Video3:57
Domain of Science

The Chain of Life

9th - 12th Standards
The narrator of a short animated video asks viewers to consider how they are just one link in a great chain of life that extends all the way back through time to the first single-cell organisms.
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Instructional Video3:39
TED-Ed

What Is the Internet of Things?

6th - 12th Standards
High schoolers today take it for granted that their computers, cell phones, cars, game systems, and other electronics send them alerts and talk to each other. Teach them more about the Internet of Things with an explanatory video that...
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Instructional Video6:54
1
1
Crash Course

Supreme Court of the United States Procedures: Crash Course Government and Politics #20

9th - 12th Standards
How can you get a case argued before the Supreme Court of the United States? Learners research the way a court case ends up in the highest court in the 20th installment of a 50-part series covering the United States government and...
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Instructional Video5:32
Nemours KidsHealth

How the Body Works: Endocrine Glands

3rd - 8th Standards
Mr. Glandman will not put your class to sleep as he explains the endocrine system. This simply animated cartoon showcases a leotard-donned super hero as he explains to a responsive audience how glands release hormones and instruct cells...
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Instructional Video3:34
Curated OER

Skeletal Muscle Structure

9th - 12th
Skeletal or striated, muscles are shown down to the chemical components. All the fibers that make up a muscle cell are described and animated. Use this to illustrate the parts of skeletal muscles for your anatomy or biology classes.
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Instructional Video3:06
Deep Look

This Pulsating Slime Mold Comes in Peace (ft. It's Okay to Be Smart)

6th - 12th Standards
Can you name an organism that isn't a plant, animal, or fungus? Here's a hint: each cell contains thousands of nuclei. Slime mold may not have any appendages, but their movements fascinate scientists. The video focuses on these unique...
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Instructional Video1:46
Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Human Chromosomes

9th - 12th Standards
Learn a little about what makes humans unique. Young scholars view a video lesson as an introduction to chromosome pairs. Images show pairs of chromosomes including the XX or XY sex chromosome combinations.
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Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

What is Epigenetics?

7th - 12th
Epigenetics has more to do with external influences than with our genetic code. Environmental factors can cause different genes to become more or less active in individuals. Watch an informative video to discover how this phenomenon works.
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Instructional Video4:58
TED-Ed

How Do Solar Panels Work?

4th - 8th Standards
What are those shiny things that people are installing on the roofs of their houses? Learn about the structure, function, and logistics of solar panels, as well as the challenges of using the sun's energy as our exclusive power source on...
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Instructional Video6:12
Bozeman Science

Hierarchy of Life

9th - 12th Standards
The leader of the biology gang is known as the nucleus. In the video, learners see the different levels of the hierarchy of life. Scholars explore each level, listening to descriptions and seeing examples of each one. It is the second...
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Instructional Video3:29
FuseSchool

What is DNA?

9th - 12th Standards
Don't under-strand DNA? Watch an informative Fuse School Genetics video to learn what DNA is and where it is found. It also explains what DNA does, its relationship with genes, the four nucleotides, and their base pairs.
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Instructional Video5:45
Be Smart

The Most Extreme Life Forms on Earth… and Beyond?

6th - 12th Standards
Earth's strangest creatures may be the key to finding life on other planets! Introduce biology scholars to the extreme world of extremophiles with a video from a large science playlist. From the depths of the ocean to the heart of the...
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Instructional Video5:05
TED-Ed

How to Sequence the Human Genome

9th - Higher Ed Standards
Every human is unique, from our thoughts and actions to our DNA. Scientists spent billions of dollars and over a decade to map the human genome, the sequence of DNA within one human being. Since the project was completed ten years ago,...
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Instructional Video9:29
Education Development Center

What's Cooking? Bacteria

7th - Higher Ed
There's no need for bacteria hysteria! With this flashy, gourmet-cooking-show-style video, young bacteriologists find that there are tremendous amounts of microbes in different foods that we eat and inside our bodies. Kitchen instruction...
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Instructional Video10:10
PBS

Why Triassic Animals Were Just the Weirdest

6th - 12th Standards
Normally when two species look similar, they are closely related. However, this doesn't seem to apply to the Triassic animals. Learn why these familiar looking animals are not actually related to today's animals. Viewers come to...
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Instructional Video2:31
Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Zebrafish Heart Regeneration

9th - 12th Standards
Zebrafish find popularity among aquarium owners for their beauty and biologists for their unique abilities. Biologists discovered zebrafish have the ability to regenerate damaged hearts. Use the video to observe and understand this...
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Instructional Video2:48
MinuteEarth

Why Are There Dangerous Ingredients In Vaccines?

6th - 12th Standards
How does a cocktail of aluminum, formaldehyde, and an infectious disease keep you healthy? Science scholars explore the composition and role of vaccines in a short video that explains how vaccines interact with our immune systems, why...
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Instructional Video4:47
American Chemical Society

The World's Smallest Robots: Rise of the Nanomachines

9th - Higher Ed Standards
Think robots are big, clunky heaps of metal? Not anymore! Introduce your class to a whole new breed of robots through a video from the American Chemical Society's Reactions playlist. The resource shows what these tiny machines are made...
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Instructional Video10:14
Crash Course

The Chemical Mind

9th - 12th
"It's all about the neurons, baby!" Part 3 of the 13-video course on psychology focuses on how body chemistry influences thinking and behavior. The structure and functions of neurons, synapses, and hormones, and the special importance of...
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Instructional Video12:04
1
1
Crash Course

The Nervous System

9th - 12th Standards
What do you call a brain without one billion neurons? A no-brainer! The narrator of a video about the brain and the differences between the central and peripheral nervous systems walks viewers through both systems, explaining how they...
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Instructional Video18:58
Howard Hughes Medical Institute

Skin Color Interactive Video: The Biology of Skin Color

9th - 12th
It's all just skin deep. An anthropologist explains in a video how she used UV radiation data from NASA to come up with a theory on how human skin color has evolved over time. The skin has to be dark enough to block harmful UV radiation,...
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Instructional Video6:49
Kurzgesagt – In a Nutshell

The Immune System Explained I—Bacteria Infection

9th - Higher Ed Standards
You are under attack! Every second of your life bacteria, viruses, and more attempt to enter your body. The video explains your immune system and the extremes your body goes through to keep you alive.
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Instructional Video5:12
MinutePhysics

Real World Telekinesis (feat. Neil Turok)

9th - 12th
Journey into the world of the unseen! Learners discover how even the simplest of objects moving at a distance without physical interaction or direction was a problem that mystified scientists for hundreds of years. The narrator explains...
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Instructional Video3:47
American Chemical Society

Is Aspartame Safe?

9th - Higher Ed Standards
How sweet it is! Is it possible for something that tastes so sweet to be bad for us? Young sweetener scientists get an in-depth look at aspartame with a video from the American Chemical Society's Reactions playlist. Content includes...