115 resources and 5 collections matched your query.
Library of 3383 accessible STEM media resources.
Showing resources 41 to 60 of 115
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In each episode, viewers are given clues about a hidden animal inside a magic box. Can viewers use all the clues to correctly guess that the mystery animal in this episode is an ostrich? Part of the "Zoobabu" series.
(Source: DCMP)
Every year, a million babies are born worldwide with hereditary diseases. Physicians once had little to offer. Now a new breed of gene doctors is on the case. They are devising treatments that target the root causes of these diseases. Please note this title contains potentially offensive language.
Host award-winning geoscientist, Richard Alley provides an eye-opening look at some of the world’s most important energy decisions, and an assessment of what it takes to build a sustainable energy infrastructure. Part 2 of Earth: The Operators’ Manual.
Provides an overview of how attraction, desire, and sexual coupling lead to conception. Covers the physiological events underlying the process of reproduction. NOTE: graphic content.
Provides a short overview of the five senses: sight, hearing, touch, smell, and taste. Explores the special relationship between taste and smell. Shows how our senses combine to help us more richly experience the world around us. Includes suggested classroom activity.
As millions of receptors in the human nervous system respond automatically to light, sound, touch, and smell, and send information to the brain, the body acts. Explores a condition amputees experience known as "phantom pain" or "phantom limb." Also explains how the blind "see" words with the receptors in their hands.
Nourish is an educational initiative designed to open a meaningful conversation about food and sustainability, particularly in schools and communities. In this clip, author Michael Pollan defines monocrops and how these crops have changed agriculture. Part of the Nourish Short Films Series.
Dr. Michelle Thaller explains the relationship between visible light and the principle of black-body radiation. These two aspects along with the anatomy of the human eye explain why stars don't appear green in the night sky. Part of the "Ask an Astronomer" series.
Guides deaf women through the first trimester of their pregnancy. Discusses medical considerations, nutrition, fitness, pregnancy, rights to an interpreter, and other issues. Also, covers what changes your body may experience by month to month. Lists 129 words in sign language. Hosted by Deanne Bray of "Sue Thomas: F.B. Eye" and Missy Keast.
For many years the Hubble Space Telescope has collected breathtaking images of the cosmos with remarkable clarity. Now, ground based telescopes are fighting back. They are combining the precision of several instruments and correcting for atmospheric shimmer. This program presents and explains the designs, uses, and outputs of different types of telescopes.
Worldwide, more than 40 million people have Alzheimer’s. Each being stripped of their memories and often their dignity. More than 100 years ago, a doctor identified two possible causes of Alzheimer’s: gooey plaques and fibrous tangles in brain tissue. This documentary investigates both and highlights the key researchers in the field who have helped to develop the leading theories of the disease.
Guides deaf women through the second trimester of their pregnancy. Discusses medical considerations, nutrition, fitness, pregnancy, rights to an interpreter, and other issues. Also, covers what changes your body may experience by month to month. Lists 129 words in sign language. Hosted by Deanne Bray of "Sue Thomas: F.B. Eye" and Missy Keast.
More than 70 underwater canyons exist off the northeastern coast of the United States, and some are more than three miles deep. In this video, journey to some of the deep canyons and discover new species of sea coral through the eye of a remotely operated vehicle (ROV).
The egg is a miracle of technology, biology, and genealogy. It starts with a line of purebred chickens and goes through four generations of hens before the perfect egg is produced. This episode looks at the science behind egg production, analysis, and even preparation. Part of the "Science to Go With Dr. Joe Schwarcz" series.
With support from the National Science Foundation, computer scientist Manuela Veloso and her team at Carnegie Mellon University are developing CoBots, autonomous indoor service robots to interact with people and provide help. CoBots can transport objects, deliver messages, and escort people to places. They are able to plan their paths and smoothly navigate autonomously.
Guides deaf women through the third trimester of their pregnancy. Discusses medical considerations, nutrition, fitness, pregnancy, rights to an interpreter, and other issues. Also, covers what changes your body may experience by month to month. Also, explains stages of labor, C-section, discomforts of pregnancy, and monitoring fetal movements. Hosted by Deanne Bray of "Sue Thomas: F.B. Eye" and Missy Keast.
Offers commonsense tips and step-by-step demonstrations on dog care as an alternative to high veterinary bills. Highlights include: toenail maintenance; treating infections and cuts; eye, teeth, and ear care; dry and itchy skin; and dietary considerations. NOTE: Demonstrates how to empty anal glands.
What the microscope did to unlock the secrets of biology, the chemiscope is intended to do, to revolutionize chemistry. The ultimate goal is to observe chemistry in the act, to see the making and breaking of bonds in real-space and real-time. Part of the National Science Foundation Series “Science Nation.”
Part of the "The Biology Classics" series. Daphnia are small, planktonic crustaceans. Provides a classic study in arthropod behavior and anatomy. Examines the eye, brain, jaws, intestine, legs (with gills), and heart. Identifies two kinds of eggs: those that hatch directly into female daphnia and resistant eggs that carry the species through periods of freezing and drying.
A young boy and his dog decide they have had enough of winter, so they plant a garden. They watch and wait until all the brown starts to become a hopeful shade of green, a sign that spring may finally be on its way. Based on the book by Erin Stead.
Showing collections 1 to 5 of 5
Resources related to vision
A collection containing 12 resources, curated by Charles LaPierre
Collection of anatomy resources
A collection containing 21 resources, curated by Benetech
Biology related concepts
A collection containing 59 resources, curated by Benetech
Resources to teach younger students about animals
A collection containing 58 resources, curated by DIAGRAM Center
A collection of Chemistry related resources
A collection containing 67 resources, curated by Benetech