Instructional Video10:24
Bozeman Science

Asking Scientific Questions

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen explains how you can get your students asking more and better scientific questions. In this video Paul Andersen explains how scientific phenomenon and sensemaking can be used in the science classroom to engage...
Instructional Video4:21
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Evolution's great mystery: Language | Michael Corballis

Pre-K - Higher Ed
What we call language is something more specific than communication. Language is about sharing what's in our minds: stories, opinions, questions, the past or future, imagined times or places, ideas. It is fundamentally open-ended, and...
Instructional Video14:30
Bozeman Science

AP Biology Test: A User Guide

12th - Higher Ed
Mr. Andersen describes the two portions of the AP Biology Test. Tips for answering multiple choice and free response questions are included. Sample questions from old AP tests are also included.
Instructional Video11:34
TLDR News

Is Lockdown Ending Dangerously Soon? Schools & Shops reopen in England - TLDR News

12th - Higher Ed
The UK is currently preparing to re-open, with larger gatherings permitted and schools re-opening from tomorrow. However, some are concerned that this is happening too quickly before the UK is truly ready to re-open. So in this video, we...
Instructional Video8:50
Crash Course

Astrophysics and Cosmology: Crash Course Physics

12th - Higher Ed
It's time for the end. At least the end of our first series on Physics here at Crash Course. In this episode of Crash Course Physics, Shini sits down to talk about Astrophysics and Cosmology. By using what we've learned this year, we can...
Instructional Video1:02:39
World Science Festival

Will Self-Taught, A.I. Powered Robots Be the End of Us?

6th - 11th
“Success in creating effective A.I.,” said the late Stephen Hawking, “could be the biggest event in the history of our civilization. Or the worst. We just don’t know.” Are we creating the instruments of our own destruction or exciting...
Instructional Video3:57
World Science Festival

Where Ideas Meet Technology

6th - 11th
Is there a division between ideas and technology? ABC News correspondent John Donvan poses this question to the participants of Internet Everywhere. We learn how the internet's open-ended simplicity lent to the emergence of many...
Podcast7:58
Tumble Science Podcast for Kids

Yoga to Go to Bed: Bear Cave Adventure

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Do you get sleepy at the end of the day? Do you sometimes have trouble falling asleep? Yoga is a great way to relax and stretch before bed, and can even help you sleep better! Join us on a relaxing bedtime adventure! Our yoga guide...
Instructional Video11:48
Curated Video

Is Time Travel to the Past Scientifically Possible?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewTraveling forward in time is not a problem. You're doing that now. Can we travel backward in time? There is a theoretically possible way to do it using wormholes. One solution to general relativity predicts an Einstein Rosen bridge,...
Instructional Video3:31
National Geographic

Squeezing Through Rocky Caves to Find Ancient Skeletons | Expedition Raw

Pre-K - 11th
Watch the real-life "bone collector" in action. Biological anthropologist and National Geographic Emerging Explorer Marina Elliott ventured a hundred feet deep into an ancient cave, at times squeezing through passages only eight inches...
Instructional Video3:31
National Geographic

Squeezing Through Rocky Caves to Find Ancient Skeletons | Expedition Raw

Pre-K - 11th
Watch the real-life "bone collector" in action. Biological anthropologist and National Geographic Emerging Explorer Marina Elliott ventured a hundred feet deep into an ancient cave, at times squeezing through passages only eight inches...
Instructional Video7:23
Curated Video

How mitochondrial diseases are inherited

9th - 11th
In this video, Professor Rob Lue explains how mitochondrial diseases are inherited and discusses the threshold effect and its implications for mitochondrial disease inheritance. *** Sign-up for the course “Cell Biology: Mitochondria” on...
Instructional Video1:55
SciShow

What Happens When You Faint?

12th - Higher Ed
Why do we faint? Because sometimes, your nervous system just doesn’t know what to do with itself.
Instructional Video5:02
TED-Ed

The Mysterious Science of Pain

6th - 12th
The amount of pain one experiences is not directly connected to the amount of tissue damage. In fact, it is possible for pain to occur without any tissue damage at all! A video lesson digs into the science behind the phenomenon and asks...
Instructional Video4:56
Veritasium

Climate Change is Boring

9th - 12th Standards
How can something so important be, well, boring? Explore the opinions of random citizens through a video by Veritasium. The narrator asks open-ended questions to interviewees about global warming, their personal efforts to reduce...
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

Why do Animals Form Swarms?

6th - 12th Standards
Swarms contain no leader, yet often act with an intelligence higher than any individual member. Birds, insects, and fish all commonly swarm for a variety of reasons. Scholars learn about swarming behavior in a short video before...
Instructional Video25:02
TED-Ed

From Mach-20 Glider to Humming Bird Drone

7th - 12th Standards
"What would you attempt to do if you knew you could not fail?" This question guides Regina Dugan's exploration of amazing achievements in science and engineering that push the boundary of impossibility. From robotic hummingbirds and...
Instructional Video10:21
TED-Ed

Cheese, Dogs, and a Pill to Kill Mosquitoes and End Malaria

9th - 12th Standards
This is a fantastic demonstration of how out-of-the-box science can serve the needs of mankind and save millions of lives. Bart Knois takes his audience through the step-by-step process of his research to kill mosquitoes and fight...
Instructional Video3:10
TED-Ed

What is Color?

8th - 12th Standards
"To understand the phenomenon of color, it helps to think about light as a wave." This is a brief and very informative instructional video on what color is and why we are able to see it. Your young scientists will learn such terms as the...
Instructional Video4:03
TED-Ed

The Effects of Underwater Pressure on the Body

6th - 12th Standards
Exactly what causes the the pain you feel when diving to the deep end of a pool? Find out with this short video that explores the physical laws governing the behavior of gases and the ways they affect marine life...
Instructional Video5:05
TED-Ed

What is Chirality and How Did it Get in My Molecules?

9th - 12th
Flashy animation, superb narrative, and a touch of bad-hair-day humor explain the nature of chiral molecules in this five-minute feature. Viewers find out how chemist Jacobus Van't Hoff proposed that some saturated carbon molecules are...
Instructional Video3:47
TED-Ed

Where We Get Our Fresh Water

6th - 12th Standards
This fresh resource explores the world's fresh water: where it can be found, and how humans use it. You might be surprised at the variety of domestic uses! Short, but sweet, this feature can be followed by a class discussion using the...
Instructional Video4:39
TED-Ed

Why is Bread Fluffy, Vinegar Sour, and Swiss Cheese Holey?

7th - 12th Standards
The gourmands and foodies in your class will love this gastronomical video! Educational and entertaining, the video explains the natural and added microorganisms that occur with food production, including yeast in bread, carbonation in...
Instructional Video4:25
1
1
TED-Ed

The Pangaea Pop-up

5th - 12th Standards
The amazing animation for a video on continental drift is comprised of the pages of a sophisticated pop-up book, The Moving Earth. As the pages turn, your earth scientists discover the tectonic plates of the lithosphere and the...

Other popular searches