Instructional Video5:04
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why should you read Dante's "Divine Comedy"? | Sheila Marie Orfano

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Abandon all hope, ye who enter here... Inscribed above the Gate of Hell, this prophecy sets into motion an epic journey for salvation. Written over 10 years, Dante Alighieri's three-part narrative poem "Divine Comedy" is both an...
Instructional Video4:55
TED-Ed

The world's biggest battery looks nothing like a battery | TED-Ed

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As of 2020, the world's biggest lithium-ion battery is hooked up to the Southern California power grid and can provide enough power for about 250,000 homes. But it's actually not the biggest battery in the world: a pair of lakes are. How...
Instructional Video4:23
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How do we know what color dinosaurs were? - Len Bloch

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The microraptor was a four-winged carnivorous dinosaur with iridescent black feathers. But if our information about this dinosaur comes from fossils, how can we be certain about its color? Len Bloch shows how making sense of the evidence...
Instructional Video4:14
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Who is Alexander von Humboldt? - George Mehler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Have you heard of Alexander von Humboldt? Not likely. The geologist turned South American explorer was a bit of an 18th century super scientist, traveling over 24,000 miles to understand the relationship between nature and habitat....
Instructional Video3:58
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why is this painting so captivating? - James Earle and Christina Bozsik

Pre-K - Higher Ed
On first glance, the painting Las Meninasc (The Maids of Honorc) might not seem terribly special, but it's actually one of the most analyzed pieces in the history of art. Why is this painting by Diego Velazquez so captivating? James...
Instructional Video5:19
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The great brain debate - Ted Altschuler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Throughout history, scientists have proposed conflicting ideas on how the brain carries out functions like perception, memory, and movement. Is each of these tasks carried out by a specific area of the brain? Or do multiple areas work...
Instructional Video8:01
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Gauntlet | Think Like A Coder, Ep 8 | Alex Rosenthal

Pre-K - Higher Ed
This is episode 8 of our animated series "Think Like A Coder." This 10-episode narrative follows a girl, Ethic, and her robot companion, Hedge, as they attempt to save the world. The two embark on a quest to collect three artifacts and...
Instructional Video4:36
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How Phillis Wheatley captured the attention of the world | Charita Gainey

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1775, General George Washington received a poem from one of colonial America's most famous writers. Its verses praised the burgeoning revolution, invoking the goddess of their new nation to aid the general's cause. But this ode to...
Instructional Video4:43
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What causes yeast infections, and how do you get rid of them? | Liesbeth Demuyser

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The vagina harbors hundreds of different kinds of microorganisms. Candida yeasts are usually present in small quantities and most of the time, these fungi are harmless. But, under certain conditions, Candida yeasts can cause infections....
Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The world's slimiest animal | Noah R. Bressman and Douglas Fudge

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 2017, a truck screeched to a halt. One of its containers slid off, hit a car, and spilled its contents— thousands of kilograms of hagfish. The result of this accident was an absolute mess: the highway was coated in a thick slime that...
Instructional Video4:42
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: A brief history of dumplings | Miranda Brown

Pre-K - Higher Ed
As archaeologists pored over ancient tombs in western China, they discovered some surprisingly well-preserved and familiar relics. Though hardened over 1,000 years, there sat little crescent-shaped dumplings. So who invented these plump...
Instructional Video4:51
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why the Sun could crash your internet | Fabio Pacucci

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In September 1859, miners following the Colorado gold rush woke up to another sunny day. Or so they thought. To their surprise, they soon discovered it was actually 1am and the sky wasn't lit by the sun, but rather by brilliant drapes of...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The Nutritionist by Andrea Gibson

Pre-K - Higher Ed
An animated interpretation of Andrea Gibson's poem "The Nutritionist"
Instructional Video4:59
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why is Aristophanes called "The Father of Comedy"? - Mark Robinson

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Aristophanes, often referred to as the Father of Comedy, wrote the world's earliest surviving comic dramas. They're stuffed full of parodies, songs, sexual jokes and surreal fantasy -- and they've shaped how comedy's been written and...
Instructional Video3:31
TED-Ed

TED-ED: The exceptional life of Benjamin Banneker - Rose-Margaret Ekeng-Itua

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Born in 1731 to freed slaves on a farm in Baltimore, Benjamin Banneker was obsessed with math and science. And his appetite for knowledge only grew as he taught himself astronomy, mathematics, engineering, and the study of the natural...
Instructional Video5:09
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Einstein's brilliant mistake: Entangled states - Chad Orzel

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When you think about Einstein and physics, E=mc^2 is probably the first thing that comes to mind. But one of his greatest contributions to the field actually came in the form of an odd philosophical footnote in a 1935 paper he co-wrote...
Instructional Video4:06
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: What is the biggest single-celled organism? - Murry Gans

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The elephant is a creature of epic proportions -- and yet, it owes its enormity to more than 1,000 trillion microscopic cells. And on the epically small end of things, there are likely millions of unicellular species, yet there are very...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

Why didn't this 2,000 year old body decompose? | Carolyn Marshall

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It may not appear very lively six feet underground, but a single teaspoon of soil contains more organisms than there are human beings on the planet. From bacteria and algae to fungi and protozoa, soils are home to one quarter of Earth's...
Instructional Video5:15
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How the world's longest underwater tunnel was built

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Flanked by two powerful nations, the English Channel has long been one of the world’s most important maritime passages. Yet for most of its history, crossing was a dangerous prospect. Engineers proposed numerous plans for spanning the...
Instructional Video4:50
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why should you read Shakespeare's "The Tempest"? - Iseult Gillespie

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Explore William Shakespeare’s play “The Tempest”, a story of shipwreck, magic and a fight for power. -- Claps of thunder and flashes of lightning illuminate a swelling sea, as a ship buckles beneath the waves. It is no ordinary storm,...
Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The surprising link between stress and memory - Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You spend weeks studying for an important test. On the big day, you wait nervously as your teacher hands it out. You're working your way through, when you're asked to define "ataraxia." You know you've seen the word before, but your mind...
Instructional Video4:25
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How the world's first subway system was built - Christian Wolmar

Pre-K - Higher Ed
It was the dawn of 1863, and London's not-yet-opened subway system - the first of its kind in the world - had the city in an uproar. Most people thought the project, which cost more than 100 million dollars in today's money, would never...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What are mini brains? - Madeline Lancaster

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Shielded by our thick skulls and swaddled in layers of protective tissue, the human brain is extremely difficult to observe in action. Luckily, scientists can use brain organoids - pencil-eraser-sized masses of cells that function like...
Instructional Video4:28
TED-Ed

TED-ED: This is Sparta: Fierce warriors of the ancient world - Craig Zimmer

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In ancient Greece, violent internal conflict between border neighbors and war with foreign invaders was a way of life, and Greeks were considered premier warriors. Sparta, specifically, had an army of the most feared warriors in the...