| Duration | Views/day |
EduTube-Index |
|||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Ken Robinson - Changing Education Paradigms |
Excellent animation adapted from Sir Ken Robinson's talk at RSA. |
11:41 | 11475 | 6.31 |
|
Information R/evolution |
How is digital information different? This video explores the changes in the way we find, store, create, critique, and share information. |
0:00 | 901 | 6.20 |
|
Do schools today kill creativity? |
Education guru Sir Ken Robinson makes an entertaining (and profoundly moving) case for creating an education system that nurtures creativity, rather than undermining it. |
20:04 | 1903 | 6.05 |
|
Mister Rogers defending PBS to the US Senate |
In 1969, Fred Rogers appeared before the United States Senate Subcommittee on Communications and spoke about the need for social and emotional education that public television provided. |
6:50 | 739 | 6.01 |
|
Parents as Role Models: Children see. Children Do. |
This video shows how children mimic the behavior of their parents, and why it is important to have good role models. |
1:31 | 406 | 5.85 |
|
Did You Know 4.0 |
Another fantastic visual presentation of intriguing statistics, focusing on the changing media landscape, convergence and technology. The video was made in partnership with The Economist. |
4:46 | 2729 | 5.85 |
|
Did You Know 3.0 |
Incredible facts about India, China, the state of the world today and in the future, by Karl Fisch, Scott McLeod and Jeff Brenman. |
0:00 | 352 | 5.60 |
|
Did You Know 2.0 - Technology and the Future |
A visual presentation of thought provoking statistics. This is an official update to the original "Shift Happens" video from Karl Fisch and Scott McLeod, with updated statistics and a new design. |
8:19 | 2414 | 5.55 |
|
Dalton Sherman - Do you believe in me? |
"I believe in me. Do you believe in me?" - 10-year old, fifth grader, award winning orator Dalton Sherman gives a speech at a beginning-of-school pep rally. |
8:56 | 539 | 5.42 |
|
15 year old from Malawi builds windmill using spare parts |
William Kamkwamba, a school drop-out (his family couldn't afford the fees) who lives in a remote village with no electricity, built his family a windmill using bicycle parts and scrap materials. The young inventor only had a photograph in a primary school textbook on energy to guide him. |
6:08 | 246 | 5.41 |