TED-Ed: Lessons Worth Sharing

A podcast by TED

Categories:

97 Episodes

  1. The Artists | Think Like A Coder, Ep 5 | Alex Rosenthal

    Published: 13/01/2020
  2. Can you solve the dragon jousting riddle? | Alex Gendler

    Published: 10/01/2020
  3. The mysterious life and death of Rasputin | Eden Girma

    Published: 08/01/2020
  4. Could a breathalyzer detect cancer? | Julian Burschka

    Published: 06/01/2020
  5. A brief history of alcohol | Rod Phillips

    Published: 02/01/2020
  6. Why should you read "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding? | Jill Dash

    Published: 12/12/2019
  7. Hacking bacteria to fight cancer | Tal Danino

    Published: 11/12/2019
  8. The Train Heist | Think Like A Coder, Ep 4 | Alex Rosenthal

    Published: 09/12/2019
  9. How does chemotherapy work? | Hyunsoo Joshua No

    Published: 05/12/2019
  10. Why doesn't the Leaning Tower of Pisa fall over? | Alex Gendler

    Published: 03/12/2019
  11. How corn conquered the world | Chris A. Kniesly

    Published: 02/12/2019
  12. Is marijuana bad for your brain? | Anees Bahji

    Published: 02/12/2019
  13. Can you outsmart this logical fallacy? | Alex Gendler

    Published: 25/11/2019
  14. History's "worst" nun | Theresa A. Yugar

    Published: 21/11/2019
  15. How does laser eye surgery work? | Dan Reinstein

    Published: 19/11/2019
  16. The Furnace Bots | Think Like A Coder, Ep 3 | Alex Rosenthal

    Published: 18/11/2019
  17. The myth of Loki and the master builder | Alex Gendler

    Published: 14/11/2019
  18. How does impeachment work? | Alex Gendler

    Published: 26/09/2019
  19. A brief history of cannibalism | Bill Schutt

    Published: 25/07/2019
  20. The Opposites Game | Brendan Constantine

    Published: 03/06/2019

4 / 5

TED-Ed's commitment to creating lessons worth sharing is an extension of TED's mission of spreading great ideas. Within TED-Ed's growing library of TED-Ed animations, you will find carefully curated educational videos, many of which represent collaborations between talented educators and animators nominated through the TED-Ed website (ed.ted.com).

Visit the podcast's native language site