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Instructional Video2:47
SciShow Kids

Make Your Own Well! Science Project for Kids

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks have talked about how wells move water from one place to another before; now they're going to show you how to build your very own so you can see for yourself!
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Instructional Video4:59
Science360

Science of the Winter Olympics - Curling

12th - Higher Ed
Curling has been in the Winter Olympics for four years now, but it still seems a little strange to most of us. John Shuster, the captain--or "skip"--of the U.S. Curling Team in Vancouver, explains this unusual sport, and NSF-funded...
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Instructional Video7:12
Zach Star

Earth and Environmental Science - Careers, Concentrations, and Courses

12th - Higher Ed
This video covers the Earth and Environmental science major and places an emphasis on earth science, soil science, geology, and hydrology. The Earth and Environmental Science major is a broad major that allows students a lot of...
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Instructional Video2:59
Science360

Rock-n-roll bridges, blinking eye-on-a-chip, high-flying low metabolism, & urban air “re-leaf”

12th - Higher Ed
4 Awesome Discoveries You Probably Didn’t Hear About - Episode 33 Rock-n-roll bridges, blinking eye-on-a-chip, high-flying low metabolism, and urban air “re-leaf.” It’s four awesome discoveries you probably didn’t hear about. Guitar...
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Instructional Video25:09
Curated Video

‎NASA in Silicon Valley: Darlene Lim Talks About Some Of The Challenges Of Doing Science On Mars

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A conversation with Darlene Lim, Principal Investigator on NASA’s Biologic Analog Science Associated with Lave Terrains (BASALT) project.
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Instructional Video4:06
SciShow Kids

Make Your Own Rock Candy!

K - 5th
Jessi and Squeaks learn all about crystallization while they make some yummy rock candy! Second Grade Next Generation Science Standards Disciplinary Core Ideas: PS1.A: Structure and Properties of Matter - Different kinds of matter exist...
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Instructional Video2:29
National Geographic

Hunting for Rocks | Life Below Zero

Pre-K - 11th
Andy and Kate head out on a camping and gathering trip to get rock for a summer project. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe ➡ Watch all clips of Life Below Zero here: http://bit.ly/WatchLifeBelowZero ➡ LIFE BELOW ZERO AIRS...
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Instructional Video3:17
Curated Video

Ancient Organics Discovered on Mars

3rd - 11th
Since arriving at Mars in 2012, NASA's Curiosity rover has drilled into rocks in search of organics - molecules containing carbon. Organics are the building blocks of all life on Earth, though they can also come from non-living sources....
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Instructional Video3:49
NASA

Exploring A Crater

3rd - 11th
This video looks at a NASA Goddard Instrument Field Team deployment to the Kilbourne Hole maar crater in New Mexico. The scientists came here to test hand-held geological instruments that may one day be used by astronauts exploring the...
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Instructional Video53:19
Curated Video

‎Houston We Have a Podcast: Uncommon Origins

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Shawn Cvetezar, Laura Paulino, and Don Caluya, NASA interns representing NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center, Ames Research Center, and Johnson Space Center, respectively, reflect upon their non-traditional paths that led them to NASA...
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Instructional Video14:49
TED Talks

Brian Cox: CERN's supercollider

12th - Higher Ed
"Rock-star physicist" Brian Cox talks about his work on the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. Discussing the biggest of big science in an engaging, accessible way, Cox brings us along on a tour of the massive project.
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Instructional Video6:29
SciShow

Origins of Intolerance

12th - Higher Ed
Hank's news this week informs us on a couple of crazy science experiments, updates us on some earlier topics (dangerous asteroids and ancient phallic rock art), and briefs us on a new study that seeks to find the evolutionary origins of...
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Instructional Video6:17
SciShow

Origins of Intolerance

12th - Higher Ed
Hank's news this week informs us on a couple of crazy science experiments, updates us on some earlier topics (dangerous asteroids and ancient phallic rock art), and briefs us on a new study that seeks to find the evolutionary origins of...
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Instructional Video7:09
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Lewis R. Gordon - 'On The Pulse Of Morning' by Maya Angelou

Higher Ed
Lewis R. Gordon is an Afro-Jewish philosopher, political thinker, educator, and musician (drums, other percussive instruments, and piano), who was born on the island of Jamaica and grew up in the Bronx, New York, where he attended...
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Instructional Video8:26
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Lewis R. Gordon - Being Human as a Relationship

Higher Ed
Lewis R. Gordon is an Afro-Jewish philosopher, political thinker, educator, and musician (drums, other percussive instruments, and piano), who was born on the island of Jamaica and grew up in the Bronx, New York, where he attended...
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Instructional Video3:05
Curated Video

Explore Mars' Jezero Crater with NASA’s Perseverance Rover

K - 11th
This guided tour of Mars' Jezero Crater from NASA’s Perseverance rover provides a glimpse of the Martian landscape from the rover's highest vantage point yet in the “Séítah” region. Perseverance Project Scientist Ken Farley points out...
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Instructional Video2:28:15
Curated Video

NASA Hangout: Comet ISON LIVE

3rd - 11th
NASA Hangout: Comet ISON LIVE The ultimate battle of fire and ice! Who will win, the sun or Comet #ISON? Join #NASA as we followed the journey of Comet ISON as it slingshot around the sun. During this LIVE event NASA scientists answered:...
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Instructional Video2:33
Science360

Earthquakes To The Core--Researchers Drill Down At The Epicenter

12th - Higher Ed
Understanding what happens at the epicenter of an earthquake, as the tectonic plates beneath the earth shift and the earth shakes, could help us better predict when and where the next big one will hit. For the past six years scientists...
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Instructional Video0:42
Science360

Making self-driving cars safer in the rain and snow

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers look under the road to aid self-driving cars Even the most high-tech vehicles don’t navigate well in rain and snow Car companies and researchers have been feverishly working to improve the technologies behind self-driving...
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Instructional Video2:49
Science360

The RAT Pack - Using sound to find clogged sewer pipes

12th - Higher Ed
InfoSense, Inc., a small business that received early funding from the National Science Foundation, has developed a technology that helps keep sewer pipes clog-free. The company, which is spun out of University of North Carolina at...
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Instructional Video51:16
Curated Video

‎Houston We Have a Podcast: Artemis Moon Tools

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Trevor Graff and Adam Naids, Project Manager for exploration science and Deputy Project Manager for Artemis geology tools, respectively, share their expertise on the tools needed for the Moon’s unique terrain when we visit our...
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Instructional Video0:55
Curated Video

Share Your Apollo Story with NASA

3rd - 11th
1. Browse our list of suggested questions and see what inspires you, or think of your own. 2. Record audio of yourself or interview a loved one who remembers the Apollo era (1960-1972). 3. Email your story to NASA! July 20, 2019 marks...
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Instructional Video8:26
SciShow

Are People Really Left-Brained or Right-Brained?

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow explains how some great, Nobel-winning research into the human brain turned into a meme of misunderstanding that lasted for decades. Hosted by: Hank Green ---------- Messages from our Subbable subscribers: “Your ticket to the...
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Instructional Video1:47
National Geographic

This Japanese Cave Creates a Heart Shape With Sunlight | National Geographic

Pre-K - 11th
Each year, near the spring and autumn equinoxes, morning sunlight passes through the arch of Japan's Kameiwa Cave to create the image of a shining heart. ➡ Subscribe: http://bit.ly/NatGeoSubscribe About National Geographic: National...

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