Instructional Video8:52
Crash Course

Metaethics: Crash Course Philosophy

12th - Higher Ed
We begin our unit on ethics with a look at metaethics. Hank explains three forms of moral realism – moral absolutism, and cultural relativism, including the difference between descriptive and normative cultural relativism – and moral...
Instructional Video13:49
TED Talks

TED: 4 steps to hiring fairly -- and supporting criminal justice reform | Nyra Jordan

12th - Higher Ed
Many companies have made strides when it comes to prioritizing diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI), but one group remains largely left out: people who have been involved in the criminal justice system. Social impact investor Nyra...
Instructional Video14:54
TED Talks

TED: How to build a business that lasts 100 years | Martin Reeves

12th - Higher Ed
If you want to build a business that lasts, there may be no better place to look for inspiration than your own immune system. Join strategist Martin Reeves as he shares startling statistics about shrinking corporate life spans and...
Instructional Video3:36
Curated Video

Cory Booker: US criminal justice is creating a "caste system"

9th - 11th
Sen. Cory Booker (D–NJ) sat down with Vox's German Lopez to discuss racial disparities in America's criminal justice system. See the full interview here: http://www.vox.com/2015/3/16/8205027/cory-booker-drug-war Subscribe to our channel!...
Instructional Video1:48
Curated Video

The racism of the US justice system in 10 charts

9th - 11th
Michael Brown's shooting offers yet another reminder that the US criminal justice system is riddled with racial disparities. Read the latest updates on Ferguson: http://www.vox.com/michael-brown-shooting-ferguson-mo Read a backgrounder...
Instructional Video7:32
TED Talks

TED: Am I not human? A call for criminal justice reform | Marlon Peterson

12th - Higher Ed
For a crime he committed in his early twenties, the courts sentenced Marlon Peterson to 10 years in prison -- and, as he says, a lifetime of irrelevance. While behind bars, Peterson found redemption through a penpal mentorship program...
Instructional Video1:43
Mr. Beat

Mr. Beat takes the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge

6th - 12th
Mr. Beat takes the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge
Instructional Video20:44
SciShow Kids

Amazing Scientist Story Time! | SciShow Kids Compilation

K - 5th
Squeaks is feeling a little wired and needs some story time to get sleepy this evening, so Jessi is showing him some videos about amazing scientists from history!
Instructional Video4:56
All In One Social Media

I Wrote A Book About Being A Social Media Marketer

Higher Ed
I wrote a book about my first ten years as a social media pro. All the bad and good stuff along the way.
Instructional Video2:23
World Science Festival

Can AI Improve the Criminal Justice System?

6th - 11th
Tune in and join the conversation during the premiere of "Outsourcing Humanity: Do Algorithms Make Better Decisions Than People?" on Friday, February 14th at 8pm EST. While artificial intelligence lacks empathy, reason, and even basic...
Instructional Video12:09
TED Talks

TED: Can beauty open our hearts to difficult conversations? | Titus Kaphar

12th - Higher Ed
An artwork's color or composition can pull you in -- and put you on the path to having important and difficult conversations, says artist Titus Kaphar. In this stunning talk, he reflects on his artistic evolution and takes us on a tour...
Instructional Video4:30
Brian McLogan

Summary for solving logarithmic equations

12th - Higher Ed
👉 Learn about solving logarithmic equations. Logarithmic equations are equations involving logarithms. To solve a logarithmic equation, we first use our knowledge of logarithm laws/properties to express the terms in both sides of the...
Instructional Video2:25
Cerebellum

Early Scientific Revolution - William Gilbert

9th - 12th
Europe experienced one of the most remarkable periods in history roughly between 1550 and 1700, when three of history's most important events were occurring simultaneously: the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the Scientific Revolution....
Instructional Video10:28
Crash Course

Crime: Crash Course Sociology

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve talked about deviance more broadly, but today we’re focusing on crime, specifically in the US. We’ll start with legal definitions of crime and use FBI data to get an idea of the amount and kinds of crime committed in the US. We’ll...
Instructional Video1:10:07
World Science Festival

The Science Of Justice: Fudged Forensics & Faulty Witnesses

6th - 11th
Think the American criminal justice system is an impartial arbiter of innocence and guilt? Prepare to get a heaping dose of reality, as journalist Jim Dwyer, Innocence Project founder Peter Neufeld, forensic scientist Mechthild Prinz,...
Instructional Video11:10
Curated Video

How junk science convicted an innocent man | Part 2

9th - 11th
Watch the next part of False Positive: https://youtu.be/-1y8Nq0ndsk Robert Lee Stinson's trial shows how the judicial system lacks an effective filter to catch bad science before it's used to convict innocent people. Subscribe to our...
Instructional Video1:38
Curated Video

False Positive | A new documentary from Joss Fong

9th - 11th
Watch the full documentary: https://youtu.be/EO6kYkoCEsA Become a member of the Vox Video Lab to support more reporting like this: http://bit.ly/video-lab False Positive tells the story of Robert Lee Stinson, who was wrongly convicted of...
Instructional Video10:27
The Guardian

Writing wrongs: the pioneering New York prison program transforming lives

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In the Bronx, the Prison Writes program provides therapeutic writing workshops for people trying to get back on their feet after incarceration. Humberto, 16, is trying to get back into school after a period in Rikers Island prison....
Instructional Video5:06
Curated Video

Solving Compound Conjunction Inequalities in One Variable by Graphing

K - 5th
In this lesson, students will learn how to solve compound conjunction inequalities in one variable by graphing on a number line. They will understand the similarities between solving multi-step inequalities and equations, and how to...
Instructional Video3:42
Seeker

How Much Neuroscience Is Actually Allowed in the Courtroom?

9th - 11th
"Neurolaw" is becoming increasingly important in the courtroom, but how effective are the current methods of bringing brain science to the bench? Einstein’s Brain Was Stolen and Chopped Up Into Tiny Pieces...For Science?! -...
Instructional Video3:50
Curated Video

How mandatory minimums helped drive mass incarceration

9th - 11th
Mandatory minimums were supposed to help crack down on drug crime in the 80s. But they've had huge unintended consequences. 10 charts that show the racism of US criminal justice: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=InOsF5x1lZw Senator Cory...
Instructional Video2:06
World Science Festival

A Roomful Of People Condemn 5 Innocent Men

6th - 11th
At the World Science Festival event "The Science of Justice: A Matter of Opinion," panelist and John Jay College of Criminal Justice psychologist Saul Kassin was accosted by a mysterious assailant. We asked our audience of eyewitnesses...
Instructional Video10:57
Curated Video

How bite marks made one man a murder suspect | Part 1

9th - 11th
Watch part 2: https://youtu.be/beixsgKr93o and part 3: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-1y8Nq0ndsk Help us make more ambitious series like False Positive by joining the Vox Video Lab. It brings you closer to our work and gets you...
Instructional Video12:07
TED Talks

Laura Rovner: What happens to people in solitary confinement

12th - Higher Ed
Imagine living with no significant human contact for years, even decades, in a cell the size of a small bathroom. This is the reality for those in long-term solitary confinement, a form of imprisonment regularly imposed in US prisons. In...