Instructional Video9:26
TED Talks

You are the bridge to the next generation | Ndinini Kimesera Sikar

12th - Higher Ed
Do you know what you want to preserve for the next generation? asks community leader Ndinini Kimesera Sikar. Drawing on her experience growing up in a family of 38 in a traditional Maasai village in Tanzania — where every chore was...
Instructional Video8:29
TED Talks

Are we still human if robots help raise our babies? | Sarah Blaffer Hrdy

12th - Higher Ed
AI is transforming the way we work — could it also reshape what makes us human? In this quick and insightful talk, evolutionary anthropologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy explores how the human brain was shaped by millions of years of shared...
Instructional Video8:55
SciShow

Evolution Can't Explain Your Grandma

12th - Higher Ed
There's a really interesting idea in anthropology called the grandmother hypothesis, that basically says the reason we have grandmas has to do with what makes us unique as a species. But there's a huge problem with the idea that it's...
News Clip10:19
PBS

Memphis midwives work to address racial disparities in care

12th - Higher Ed
More women in America die from pregnancy-related complications than in any other developed country in the world, and black women are most affected. NewsHour Weekend's Ivette Feliciano reports on one clinic in Memphis, Tennessee, where...
News Clip5:04
PBS

Yemen's Ongoing Civil War Creates A Life Of Loss For Children

12th - Higher Ed
As the civil war in Yemen enters its sixth year, tens of thousands have died in the fighting, while disease and hunger have killed thousands more. The many children who have lost or been abandoned by parents have suffered the most, both...
News Clip6:51
PBS

How one woman brought life-saving maternity care to Somaliland

12th - Higher Ed
Somaliland, a region of Somalia that lay in ruin from years of war, suffers

some of the world's highest rates of infant and maternal mortality. Bu
t 15
years ago, Edna Adan fulfilled a lifelong dream by building a
nonprofit...
News Clip4:18
PBS

Teaching expectant mothers to eat well

12th - Higher Ed
Pregnant women who skip meals or don't eat nutritious foods may be at greater risk for health problems. Under the Affordable Care Act, home visiting projects have received more funding for preventative care work like teaching new moms...
News Clip11:31
PBS

Should Kids' Happiness be the Goal of Parenting? (May 5, 2014)

12th - Higher Ed
For children in the U.S., unsupervised play is largely a pastime of previous generations. Hanna Rosin of The Atlantic writes about the consequences of guarding children from perceived dangers in her article, "The Overprotected Kid." Judy...
Instructional Video11:37
Crash Course

Monkeys and Morality: Crash Course Psychology

12th - Higher Ed
In this episode of Crash Course Psychology, Hank takes a look at a few experiments that helped us understand how we develop as human beings. Things like attachment, separation anxiety, stranger anxiety, and morality are all...
Instructional Video15:33
TED Talks

T. Morgan Dixon and Vanessa Garrison: The trauma of systematic racism is killing Black women. A first step toward change...

12th - Higher Ed
T. Morgan Dixon and Vanessa Garrison, founders of the health nonprofit GirlTrek, are on a mission to reduce the leading causes of preventable death among Black women -- and build communities in the process. How? By getting one million...
Instructional Video9:59
TED Talks

TED: What we don't know about mother's milk | Katie Hinde

12th - Higher Ed
Breast milk grows babies' bodies, fuels neurodevelopment, provides essential immunofactors and safeguards against famine and disease -- why, then, does science know more about tomatoes than mother's milk? Katie Hinde shares insights into...
Instructional Video7:27
SciShow

The Evolution of Male Homosexuality

12th - Higher Ed
Hank goes from space to sex and then to motherhood, covering the SpaceX launch, a mission to the moons of Jupiter, intersexual workplace rivalries, the evolution of male homosexuality, the fossil evidence of squishy baby skulls, toddler...
Instructional Video2:50
SciShow

Kids and Sugar: The Sweet-and-Lowdown

12th - Higher Ed
If you've heard it once, you've heard it a thousand times: Parents blaming their kids' active behavior on sugar. But is it true? Hank gives you sweet-and-lowdown on the extent to which sugar can and can't affect behavior, in kids and...
Instructional Video5:49
SciShow

You Can Inherit Mitochondrial DNA from Both Parents! | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Earlier this week, a team of researchers announced that they’d made a discovery about how we inherit mitochondrial DNA from our parents that could change what we know about not only disease inheritance, but human history as a whole.
Instructional Video15:33
TED Talks

TED: When Black women walk, things change | T. Morgan Dixon and Vanessa Garrison

12th - Higher Ed
T. Morgan Dixon and Vanessa Garrison, founders of the health nonprofit GirlTrek, are on a mission to reduce the leading causes of preventable death among Black women -- and build communities in the process. How? By getting one million...
Instructional Video2:30
SciShow Kids

Why Do We Have Belly Buttons?

K - 5th
Everyone has one, but how did it get there? Learn all about your belly button!
Instructional Video1:54
SciShow

Why Do Babies Smell So Good?

12th - Higher Ed
You may be familiar with it, that sweet comforting smell of new babies. So why do babies have this particular odor? Well, it has to do with psychology and a little bit of biology.
Instructional Video16:39
TED Talks

Annie Murphy Paul: What we learn before we're born

12th - Higher Ed
Pop quiz: When does learning begin? Answer: Before we are born. Science writer Annie Murphy Paul talks through new research that shows how much we learn in the womb -- from the lilt of our native language to our soon-to-be-favorite foods.
Instructional Video6:16
TED Talks

Jaap de Roode: How butterflies self-medicate

12th - Higher Ed
Just like us, the monarch butterfly sometimes gets sick thanks to a nasty parasite. But biologist Jaap de Roode noticed something interesting about the butterflies he was studying — infected female butterflies would choose to lay their...
Instructional Video15:47
TED Talks

TED: The US needs paid family leave -- for the sake of its future | Jessica Shortall

12th - Higher Ed
We need women to work, and we need working women to have babies. So why is America one of the only countries in the world that offers no national paid leave to new working mothers? In this incisive talk, Jessica Shortall makes the...
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow

Harlow's Horrifying Monkey Experiments

12th - Higher Ed
Dr. Harry Harlow's rhesus monkey experiments in the 1950s contributed a great deal to psychologists' understanding of attachment theory. Unfortunately, his later experiments also contributed a great deal to the need for ethics regulations.
Instructional Video7:59
TED Talks

TED: Maternal and child health is a human right | Aparna Hegde

12th - Higher Ed
Overcrowded clinics, extensive wait times and overworked doctors are taking a devastating toll on mothers and children in India. In this eye-opening talk, urogynecologist and TED Fellow Aparna Hegde exposes the systemic gaps that lead...
Instructional Video12:25
TED Talks

TED: How moms shape the world | Anna Malaika Tubbs

12th - Higher Ed
Mothers undeniably impact and shape history -- but their stories are often left out or misrepresented, says sociologist and author Anna Malaika Tubbs. This erasure limits policies to support mothers and their essential roles in society....
Instructional Video6:16
TED Talks

TED: A new way to think about the transition to motherhood | Alexandra Sacks

12th - Higher Ed
When a baby is born, so is a mother -- but the natural (and sometimes unsteady) process of transition to motherhood is often silenced by shame or misdiagnosed as postpartum depression. In this quick, informative talk, reproductive...