PBS
Pbs Teachers: Sand Dunes
Observe the similarities and differences between foredunes, active dunes and scrub dunes while watching kids use the scientific method to find out why some dunes are full of plants and others aren't.
PBS
Pbs Teachers: Solar Car
Explore how solar panels can be used to produce electricity. Watch kids use the scientific method to find out how the sun's position in the sky affects a solar car's performance.
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Worm Farm
Explore how worms decompose organic waste. Watch a kid use the scientific method to find out how much and how fast worms eat.
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: L Blends
This is a collection of five videos on L Blends. This resource group teaches students all about "l" blends, such as "sl,""ld," "lm," "lf," "fl," "gl," and "cl."
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Reach for the Ceiling
In this video [1:23] presenter models Reach for the Ceiling rhyme, and explain how the child will learn the exercise and follow directions.
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Here Is the Beehive
This rhyme can start a conversation with your child about where bees live, where they keep their honey, how they sound and what they look like. It can help your child learn new words and how the world works. In this video [1:01]...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: 1964: "The Importance of the Civil Rights Act"
Learn about the impact of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, often considered one of the most influential laws in U.S. history, that created a new America.
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course World History: Latin American Revolutions
John Green talks about the many revolutions of Latin America in the 19th century. At the beginning of the 1800s, Latin America was firmly under the control of Spain and Portugal. The revolutionary zeal that had recently created the...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course World History: Asian Responses to Imperialism
Join host John Green to learn about Asian perspectives on Imperialism, particularly those of writers from countries that were colonized by European powers. We'll look at the writings of Sayyid Jamal ad-Din al-Afghani from the Middle...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Programming Basics: Statements & Functions
Today, Carrie Anne is going to start our overview of the fundamental building blocks of programming languages. We'll start by creating small programs for our very own video game to show how statements and functions work. We aren't going...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Machine Learning & Artificial Intelligence
From spam filters and self-driving cars, to cutting edge medical diagnosis and real-time language translation, there has been an increasing need for our computers to learn from data and apply that knowledge to make predictions and...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Software Engineering
Today, we're going to talk about how HUGE programs with millions of lines of code like Microsoft Office are built. Programs like these are way too complicated for a single person, but instead require teams of programmers using the tools...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Computer Networks
We're going to begin with computer networks, and how they grew from small groups of connected computers on LAN networks to eventually larger worldwide networks like the ARPANET and even the Internet we know today. [11:57]
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Registers and Ram
Today we're going to create memory! Using the basic logic gates we discussed in episode 3, we can build a circuit that stores a single bit of information, and then through some clever scaling (and of course many new levels of...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Operating Systems
So, as you may have noticed from last episode, computers keep getting faster and faster, and by the start of the 1950s they had gotten so fast that it often took longer to manually load programs via punch cards than to actually run them!...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Early Programming
Since Joseph Marie Jacquard's textile loom in 1801, there has been a demonstrated need to give our machines instructions. In the last few episodes, our instructions were already in our computer's memory, but we need to talk about how...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: The World Wide Web
The World Wide Web is built on the foundation of simply linking pages to other pages with hyperlinks, but it is this massive interconnectedness that makes it so powerful. But before the web could become a thing, Tim Berners-Lee would...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Intro to Algorithms
Algorithms are the sets of steps necessary to complete computation - they are at the heart of what our devices actually do. And this isn't a new concept. Since the development of math itself, algorithms have been needed to help us...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Electronic Computing
We ended last episode at the start of the 20th century with special purpose computing devices such as Herman Hollerith's tabulating machines. But the scale of human civilization continued to grow, as did the demand for more sophisticated...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Robots
Robots are often thought of as a technology of the future, but they're already here by the millions in the workplace, our homes, and pretty soon on the roads. We'll discuss the origins of robotics to its proliferation, and even look at...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course World History: Imperialism
John Green teaches you about European Imperialism in the 19th century. European powers started to create colonial empires way back in the 16th century, but businesses really took off in the 19th century, especially in Asia and Africa....
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Alan Turing
Today we're going to take a step back from programming and discuss the person who formulated many of the theoretical concepts that underlie modern computation - the father of computer science himself: Alan Turing. Normally, we try to...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: Compression
So last episode we talked about some basic file formats, but what we didn't talk about is compression. Often files are way too large to be easily stored on hard drives or transferred over the Internet - the solution, unsurprisingly, is...
PBS
Pbs Learning Media: Crash Course Computer Science: 3 D Graphics
From polygon count and meshes, to lighting and texturing, there are a lot of considerations in building the 3D objects we see in our movies and video games, but then displaying these 3D objects of a 2D surface adds an additional number...
