Day Week A-Z

Program Schedule for Wednesday, Jun 4

TEACH 356
12:00am
12:30am
1:00am
1:30am
2:00am
2:30am
3:00am
3:30am
4:00am
4:30am
5:00am
5:30am
6:00am
6:30am
7:00am
7:30am
8:00am
8:30am
9:00am
9:30am
10:00am
10:30am
11:00am
11:30am
12:00pm
12:30pm
1:00pm
1:30pm
2:00pm
2:30pm
3:00pm
3:30pm
4:00pm
4:30pm
5:00pm
5:30pm
6:00pm
6:30pm
7:00pm
7:30pm
8:00pm
8:30pm
9:00pm
9:30pm
10:00pm
10:30pm
11:00pm
11:30pm

TEACH 356

12:00am
Ocean Vet Series
Humpback Whale

Ocean Vet Series

Humpback Whale

Duration: 0:24:12

Audience: General; Subject Areas: Science. (2017) Neil works with a team of scientists and marine mammal toxicologists on an expedition to prove the presence of deadly toxins inside Bermuda's mid migratory humpback whales. They collect biopsy samples from 50 ton humpbacks using an adapted compound bow. The team also deploy their aerial drone to observe a mother humpback and calf, and Choy has a dangerous encounter when he receives a report of a dead sperm whale being torn to shreds by hungry sharks.

12:12am
Geometry Camp
Geometry Camp

Geometry Camp

Geometry Camp

Duration: 0:16:12

A sampling of various Geometry Camp lessons that provide students with hands-on, inquiry-based learning to expose them to geometric concepts. Students are given the opportunity to practice basic concepts and functions of geometry with real world applications. Concepts introduced in Geometry Camp include the Pythagorean Theorem, shapes, patterns, area, and perimenter. General learner outcomes are embedded in this non-threatening, fun learning process.

12:30am
Grow
Farm to Schools

Grow

Farm to Schools

Duration: 0:29:00

Audience: General; Subject: Farm to School. (2017) Behind the scenes of Hawaii Department of Education's support of the Farm to Schools pilot program by former Lt. Gov. Shan Tsutsui. Interviews with Kohala Elementary Principal Danny Garcia, Chef Greg, Cafeteria Manager Aunty Priscilla, and State School Food Services Supervisor Dexter Kishida.

1:00am
Usgs - Kilauea Summit Eruption
Usgs - Kilauea Summit Eruption

Usgs - Kilauea Summit Eruption

Usgs - Kilauea Summit Eruption

Duration: 0:24:07

Audience: General; Grades: K-12; Subject Areas: Science. The video briefly recounts the eruptive history of Halema'uma'u and describes the formation and continued growth of the current summit vent and lava lake. It features USGS Hawaiian Volcano Observatory scientists sharing their insights on the summit eruption: how they monitor the lava lake, how and why the lake level rises and falls, why explosive events occur, the connection between Kilauea's ongoing summit and East Rift Zone eruptions, and the impacts of the summit eruption on the Island of Hawai'i and beyond.

1:24am
A Passion for Teaching
A Passion for Teaching

A Passion for Teaching

A Passion for Teaching

Duration: 0:08:15

This program focuses on teachers who have made a difference in the lives of their students, the educators who make their chosen profession their passion.

1:32am
Impact By Hawaii Dept of Education
Teacher of the Year 2019

Impact By Hawaii Dept of Education

Teacher of the Year 2019

Duration: 0:18:29

(2019) Video by the Hawaii State Department of Education featuring teachers and staff who have made an impact on students. This video features the district and state Teacher of the Year 2019.

1:50am
Art Shorts
Gifts of Nature

Art Shorts

Gifts of Nature

Duration: 0:04:33
1:55am
Art Shorts
Cade Roster

Art Shorts

Cade Roster

Duration: 0:04:32
2:00am
Children of the World - Film Ideas Series
Vietnam: Children of the Floating Village

Children of the World - Film Ideas Series

Vietnam: Children of the Floating Village

Duration: 0:12:47

Audience: Students; Grades: 6-12; Subject: World Cultures. (2014) From some of the most remote locations in the world the appealing photography of wide eyed children just being kids will quickly engage audience attention. These close-up programs are so captivating and the children so innocent that experiencing their unique lifestyles will have lasting effect. These children, like children everywhere, live their lives with the sweet innocence of youth combined with hopeful dreams for the future.

2:12am
Children of the World - Film Ideas Series
Myanmar: Children of the Lake

Children of the World - Film Ideas Series

Myanmar: Children of the Lake

Duration: 0:11:38

Audience: Students; Grades: 6-12; Subject: World Cultures. (2014) From some of the most remote locations in the world the appealing photography of wide eyed children just being kids will quickly engage audience attention. These close-up programs are so captivating and the children so innocent that experiencing their unique lifestyles will have lasting effect. These children, like children everywhere, live their lives with the sweet innocence of youth combined with hopeful dreams for the future.

2:24am
Children of the World - Film Ideas Series
China: Children of Chagan Lake

Children of the World - Film Ideas Series

China: Children of Chagan Lake

Duration: 0:12:14

Audience: Students; Grades: 6-12; Subject: World Cultures. (2014) From some of the most remote locations in the world the appealing photography of wide eyed children just being kids will quickly engage audience attention. These close-up programs are so captivating and the children so innocent that experiencing their unique lifestyles will have lasting effect. These children, like children everywhere, live their lives with the sweet innocence of youth combined with hopeful dreams for the future.

2:36am
Children of the World - Film Ideas Series
East Timor: Children of Ermera

Children of the World - Film Ideas Series

East Timor: Children of Ermera

Duration: 0:13:49

Audience: Students; Grades: 6-12; Subject: World Cultures. (2014) From some of the most remote locations in the world the appealing photography of wide eyed children just being kids will quickly engage audience attention. These close-up programs are so captivating and the children so innocent that experiencing their unique lifestyles will have lasting effect. These children, like children everywhere, live their lives with the sweet innocence of youth combined with hopeful dreams for the future.

2:50am
Draw Me A Story
CC
Little Fir Tree, The ( Colored Ink and Pen)

Draw Me A Story

Little Fir Tree, The ( Colored Ink and Pen)

Duration: 0:09:25

Audience: Students; Grades: K-3; Subject: Language Arts, Fine Arts. (2007) Using colored ink and pens, an artist tells the story of a little fir tree who comes to life and tells the children the story of how when he was only five, his dream came true: he became a Christmas tree.

3:00am
Mark Kistler's Imagination Station Ii
Intellectual Insects

Mark Kistler's Imagination Station Ii

Intellectual Insects

Duration: 0:26:18

Audience: Students; Grades: K-5; Subject Areas: Fine Arts. (1999) Mark draws a praying mantis while demonstrating the Renaissance words shadow and horizon. He describes Roy Lichtenstein's painting, "Picture and Pitcher" from the Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Guest artist Doug Dubosque draws a big bug.

3:30am
Mark Kistler's Imagination Station Ii
Intergalactic Iguana

Mark Kistler's Imagination Station Ii

Intergalactic Iguana

Duration: 0:26:22

Audience: Students; Grades: K-5; Subject Areas: Fine Arts. (1999) Mark draws an iguana while demonstrating the Renaissance words bonus and density. At the Cleveland Museum of Art, he discusses Winslow Homer's painting, "Girls with Lobster." Animator Karen Johnson draws a space traveling iguana.

4:00am
Digital 808 Storytellers
2023 Showcase

Digital 808 Storytellers

2023 Showcase

Duration: 1:00:00
5:00am
Island Poets
Mahealani Wendt

Island Poets

Mahealani Wendt

Duration: 0:14:09

Grades: 9-12; Language Arts. This series features six island women who are distinguished poets in our community: Kathy Song, Juliet Kono, Carolyn Sinavaiana, Mahealani Perez-Wendt, Brandy Nalani McDougall, and Amalia Bueno. They have distinctive literary voices that reflect with depth their roots in Hawai'i and the Pacific. Each segment features one poet speaking about their lives and work, and sharing several of their poems on camera. After reading a poem, they comment on each piece, giving the viewers insights into their creative process. Mahealani Perez-Wendt is a Kanaka Maoli (Native Hawaiian) poet, writer and community activist residing in Hawai'i, on the island of Maui. She is the 1993 recipient of the Eliot Cades literary award, and is the author of Uluhaimalama, an anthology of her poetry. Her work has appeared in numerous publications. Her unique and accomplished voice is an important part of the development of indigenous literature in Hawai'i.

5:14am
Island Poets
Juliet Kono

Island Poets

Juliet Kono

Duration: 0:16:03

Grades: 9-12; Language arts. Juliet S. Kono has written two books of poetry, a short story collection, and several children's books. She has been widely anthologized, most recently in Imagine What It's Like, which combines literature and medicine. Her most recent book is Anshuu, a historical novel about World War II, published in 2010. Ms. Kono has won several awards, most notably the American Japanese National Literary Award and U.S./Japan Friendship Commission Creative Artists Exchange Fellowship in 1999.

5:30am
Island Poets
Cathy Song

Island Poets

Cathy Song

Duration: 0:20:03

Grades: 9-12; Language Arts. This series features six island women who are distinguished poets in our community: Kathy Song, Juliet Kono, Carolyn Sinavaiana, Mahealani Perez-Wendt, Brandy Nalani McDougall, and Amalia Bueno. They have distinctive literary voices that reflect with depth their roots in Hawai'i and the Pacific. Each segment features one poet speaking about their lives and work, and sharing several of their poems on camera. After reading a poem, they comment on each piece, giving the viewers insights into their creative process. Cathy Song was born in Honolulu, Hawai'i in 1955 of Chinese and Korean descent. She left the island to pursue her education, receiving her B.A. from Wellesley College in 1977 and an M.A. in creative writing from Boston University in 1981. She returned to Hawai'i after graduating. In 1983, Song published her first collection of poetry, Picture Bride, which won the Yale Series of Younger Poets competition, a very prestigious national poetry award.

5:50am
Circle Island
Kamiya Papaya Farm

Circle Island

Kamiya Papaya Farm

Duration: 0:09:02

Audience: General; Subject: Local businesses. (2015) Series on Hawaii's local businesses. This program is about Kamiya Papaya Farm, located in Hauula, Windward Oahu, Hawaii. Kamiya papayas are sold across supermarkets on Oahu.

6:00am
Kai Piha
Ka'ahele Ma Waikiki

Kai Piha

Ka'ahele Ma Waikiki

Duration: 0:47:57

General Audience; Subject Areas: Local history and culture. (2017) In this documentary Hawaiian historian, John Clark, takes you on a Ka'ahele Ma Waikiki, a tour of Waikiki, and shares its surfing history. He talks about the ali'i who lived there and loved its waves, the Hawaiian place names of its shoreline areas and surf spots and the styles of traditional Hawaiian surfing that were practiced there. Ka'ahele Ma Waikiki offers a truly unique look at one of the most beloved places in Hawaii.

6:47am
Kai Piha
Diamond Head Makai

Kai Piha

Diamond Head Makai

Duration: 0:58:46
7:46am
Thirst
Rochelle Lum, Shigeru Miyamoto

Thirst

Rochelle Lum, Shigeru Miyamoto

Duration: 0:13:10

Audience: General; Subject Areas: Fine Arts. Rochelle Lum - Ceramics, Shigeru Miyamoto - Ceramics

8:00am
Science360: Dispatches from the Cutting Edge
Episode 33

Science360: Dispatches from the Cutting Edge

Episode 33

Duration: 0:58:00

Audience: Students; Grades: 4-12; Subject Areas: Sustainability, STEM. (2020) In this episode: Socially assistive robots, 4 Awesome Discoveries, wearable medical devices, how termites keep cool, origami inspired robots, water tracks in the arctic, what is a telescope, exploring the rainforest with the Native American and Pacific...

9:00am
Shape of Life, The: Story of the Animal Kingdom
CC
Sponges: Animal Origins

Shape of Life, The: Story of the Animal Kingdom

Sponges: Animal Origins

Duration: 0:29:13

Audience: Students; Grades: 9-12; Science In Indonesia, introduces the story of animal origins by filming underwater explorations made by taxonomist,Christina Diaz. Ms. Diaz classifies some of the 9,000 species of sponge finding in them, vibrant animals who embody the first principles of life and living things. Focusing on cell-to cell communication, she demonstrates how sponges perform the work performed by organs in higher animals and shows how collagen supports sponge structure. She also explains how spicules define the species of sponge and how sponges obtain their food. Computer animation demonstrates how sponges feed and reproduce themselves. Moving to the Woods Hole Biological Laboratory, interviews Mitchell Sogin, an evolutionary biologist, whose experiments in gene sequencing have demonstrated that sponges are at the base of the animal kingdom. For Teacher's Guides go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLffk5QOEpyUGs2NnQ3cjRETGlnZHB3RjN3VkRrSC1wZWxUQ3pwWGFxRV9lYlU&usp=sharing

9:29am
Shape of Life, The: Story of the Animal Kingdom
CC
Cnidarians: Behavior on the Move

Shape of Life, The: Story of the Animal Kingdom

Cnidarians: Behavior on the Move

Duration: 0:29:28

Audience: Students; Grades: 9-12; Science. (2003) Biologist John "Jack" Costello explains how cnidarians, the first tentacled animals, were also the first to develop nerves and muscles that allowed them to move, find food, and protect themselves from enemies. Close-up photography of sea aenmones and corals reveal complex behaviors that might be expected of higher level animals. Costello also reviews his studies of jellyfish movement that enabled this cnidarian to become a predatory killer. In Monterey Bay, marine biologist, Bruce Robison travels in an underwater capsule called an R-O-V to discover a new species of giant jellyfish. For Teacher's Guides go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLffk5QOEpyUGs2NnQ3cjRETGlnZHB3RjN3VkRrSC1wZWxUQ3pwWGFxRV9lYlU&usp=sharing

10:00am
History of Life Series: A Study In Evolution
Plants: Earth's Quiet Rulers

History of Life Series: A Study In Evolution

Plants: Earth's Quiet Rulers

Duration: 0:44:23

Audience: Students; Grades: 9-12; Subject: Science. (2013) Explore the history of life from its humble beginnings as single-celled organisms, to its great blossoming and proliferation, which took place over the course of eons. With the help of state of the art computer graphics, the world's foremost paleontologists and biologists help unravel the greatest mysteries of life. Plants, Earth's Quiet Rulers Plants, the oldest form of life on earth hold many mysteries. While plants are often thought of as passive, we will see how many species have adopted aggressive strategies that have allowed for their survival. It is these "quiet rulers" of earth that are not only the foundation of the global ecology, but also the spring from which all life flows.

10:44am
Day in the Life of a Stem Teacher
Scott Kunihiro

Day in the Life of a Stem Teacher

Scott Kunihiro

Duration: 0:15:30
11:00am
Historic Sites of Hawaii
Lyon Arboretum

Historic Sites of Hawaii

Lyon Arboretum

Duration: 0:15:00

Audience: General; Subject: Social Studies.(2015) Hidden in the back of Manoa Valley, the Lyon Arboretum is a historic site that serves as a botanical garden, an educational institution, and a research facility. The documentary tells the history of the arboretum and the vital role it played in preserving our watershed. The many present-day activities of the arboretum are also featured including its work in preserving and exhibiting Native Hawaiian and exotic plants, its role as an educational institution and its role as a research facility.

11:15am
Historic Sites of Hawaii
The Hawaiian Rare Plant Program of the Lyon Arboretum

Historic Sites of Hawaii

The Hawaiian Rare Plant Program of the Lyon Arboretum

Duration: 0:14:18

Audience: General; Subject: Social Studies.(2015) This documentary covers the activities of the Hawaiian Rare Plant Program at the Lyon Arboretum, a program that seeks to propagate and preserve the most endangered plant species in our islands. The documentary explores the program's three main components: a seed bank, a micro-propagation laboratory, and its greenhouse facilities. The processes of seed storage and micro-propagation are explained, and several rarely seen endangered plants are featured.

11:30am
Grow
School Gardens

Grow

School Gardens

Duration: 0:29:30

Audience: General; Subject: Schools. (2018) See two large garden programs of the Hawaii Department of Education. First, Waikiki Elementary School's Mindful School Garden. Started on Earth Day over10 years ago, the fruit trees and farm plants are still going strong with help from students, parents, and community. Second, Makaha Elementary School's partnership with neighboring farm Hoa 'Aina O Makaha. Interviews with school garden teachers and staff.

12:00pm
Science of Cooking
Taste

Science of Cooking

Taste

Duration: 0:25:00

This episode covers the five taste receptors which are sweet, salty, spicy, bitter, and sour. "Why is sugar sweet?" is the wrong question. "Why does sugar taste sweet to us?" is the right question. Taste doesn't exist in things. It is something our brains create. It is a type of antenna that mankind has developed for survival. It is the ability to consume nutrients and avoid poison.

12:25pm
Science of Cooking
Heat

Science of Cooking

Heat

Duration: 0:25:00

A major part of cooking involves delivering heat energy to natural things and transforming them to the state where they can be digested and absorbed. This technique does not stop at simply making food taste good. Professor Wrangham of Harvard University says the ability to produce food through heat is what helped humans evolve.

12:50pm
Measuring Series, Visual Learning Systems
Weighing Things

Measuring Series, Visual Learning Systems

Weighing Things

Duration: 0:09:34

Audience: Students; Grades: K-3; Subject Areas: Science. (2011) This program explores the interesting and fun process of weighing common objects. Concepts and terminology: matter, mass, weight, scale, and metric system. For the teacher's guide go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLfdktnalJvOFhOT1k&usp=sharing

1:00pm
Where Food Comes From
Eat Your Veggies (And Greens!)

Where Food Comes From

Eat Your Veggies (And Greens!)

Duration: 0:21:16

There's always food growing somewhere in America. That's part of the real miracle of nature. Fruits and veggies are in full swing in Florida in the coldest months of the year ? we start this episode in the Everglades in early February with our friends from L&M Farms. Then we roll up to Georgia in spring to visit Baker Farms, one of the largest growers of greens anywhere. Then we head for North Carolina in July to follow the crop as it continues marching north before starting all over again in Florida the next year.

1:21pm
Kids in the Garden
CC
Useful Plants

Kids in the Garden

Useful Plants

Duration: 0:05:19

Grades: K-5; Subject Areas: Science. (2008) Nick explains that human beings are dependent on plants to survive. Shows how trees are turned into lumber and fuel; how cotton is produced and where wool comes from. Even explains that oil and gas come from dead plants. Introduces medicinal plants, vegetables and fruits. The activity is decorating wrapping paper with leaves and petals.

1:30pm
Grow
Kahuku Farms

Grow

Kahuku Farms

Duration: 0:24:00

Audience: General; Subject: Local business. (2017) Go behind the scenes of Kahuku Farms in this episode of GROW. Interviews with Kahuku Farms operators Kylie Matsuda-Lum and Judah Lum. See how local Hawaii farms have to work with federal, state, and county offices while providing goods and services. Also, find out more about Hawaii's local agriculture sector from interviews with Hawaii's Department of Agriculture's Scott Enright and University of Hawaii's Steven Chiang from the Agribusiness Incubator Program and GoFarm Hawaii.

1:54pm
Little Math Whiz
Up, Up, Up! The Cable Car Goes Up!: Counting

Little Math Whiz

Up, Up, Up! The Cable Car Goes Up!: Counting

Duration: 0:05:52

Grades: K-5; Subject Areas: Math. (2013) With the help of exciting math fairy tales, children are introduced to abstract mathematical concepts such as counting, categorizing, shapes and colors. Each program in the series will familiarize students with a different aspect of math by using familiar living environments as its theme. At the end of each program a fun math song repeats and reviews the contents of the fairy tale and its lesson. Correlates to Math Common Core State Standards.

2:00pm
Impossible Planet
Age Old Origins

Impossible Planet

Age Old Origins

Duration: 0:46:28
2:46pm
Elementary Earth Science - Visual Learning Company
Minerals

Elementary Earth Science - Visual Learning Company

Minerals

Duration: 0:13:26

Audience: Students; Grades: K-5; Subject: Science. (2008) The Elementary Earth Science Collection includes video programs correlated to the curriculum and specifically designed for the classroom. These titles include a wide range of earth science topics including earth, sun, moon, planets, plate tectonics, weather, water cycle, rocks, minerals, and the rock cycle. For the teacher's guide go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLfSXJ1dlBoTzJyUm8&usp=sharing

3:00pm
Hais: 2024-2025
Best Practices In Strategic Planning

Hais: 2024-2025

Best Practices In Strategic Planning

Duration: 0:28:20
3:30pm
Hais: 2024-2025
Financial Analysis for School Leadership and Board

Hais: 2024-2025

Financial Analysis for School Leadership and Board

Duration: 0:27:30
4:00pm
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice
Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice

Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice

Tracking Pacific Walrus: Expedition to the Shrinking Chukchi Sea Ice

Duration: 0:11:41

Audience: Students; Grades: K-12; Subject Areas: Science. Summer ice retreat in the Chukchi Sea between Alaska and Russia is a significant climate change impact affecting Pacific Walruses, which are being considered for listing as a threatened species. This twelve minute video follows walruses in their summer sea ice habitat and shows how USGS biologists use satellite radio tags to track their movements and behavior. The information identifies areas of special importance to walruses during sparse summer sea ice and as human presence increases in the region from oil drilling and activities such as shipping and tourism now possible with less ice.

4:11pm
Ocean Vet Series
Galapagos Shark

Ocean Vet Series

Galapagos Shark

Duration: 0:22:49

Audience: General; Subject Areas: Science. (2017) Neil and the team are on an emergency call to capture and release a sick Galapagos shark from the Bermuda aquarium. They risk their lives to transport the shark 10 miles off shore for release in a protected marine reserve. Watch Neil and the team swim with larger wild Galapagos sharks, studying their behaviour to see if there's any truth behind their reputation as wild man-eaters. This marks the start of a scientific study that will eventually help protect the declining population of this species.

4:34pm
Ocean Vet Series
Humpback Whale

Ocean Vet Series

Humpback Whale

Duration: 0:24:12

Audience: General; Subject Areas: Science. (2017) Neil works with a team of scientists and marine mammal toxicologists on an expedition to prove the presence of deadly toxins inside Bermuda's mid migratory humpback whales. They collect biopsy samples from 50 ton humpbacks using an adapted compound bow. The team also deploy their aerial drone to observe a mother humpback and calf, and Choy has a dangerous encounter when he receives a report of a dead sperm whale being torn to shreds by hungry sharks.

5:00pm
Superlife: Genetic Manipulation
Tuna: Cross-Species Surrogacy

Superlife: Genetic Manipulation

Tuna: Cross-Species Surrogacy

Duration: 0:06:50

Audience: Students; Grades: 6-12; Subject Areas: Science. (2014) Designing Life. Man has been doing it for over 10,000 years. You may not be aware of it, but we are surrounded by "Superlife," life-forms manipulated by Man. Superlife looks at the stories of how these super organisms came to permeate our planet, and how the latest science is pushing the boundaries to create more with less time and resources and at a higher quality. Note- Superlife explores the science of how mankind is manipulating life for its benefit. The series does not attempt to address the concerns surrounding cloning, genetically modified organisms or the ethics of certain farming practices.

5:06pm
Superlife: Genetic Manipulation
White Leghorn: Super Egg Layer

Superlife: Genetic Manipulation

White Leghorn: Super Egg Layer

Duration: 0:06:01

Audience: Students; Grades: 6-12; Subject Areas: Science. (2014) Designing Life. Man has been doing it for over 10,000 years. You may not be aware of it, but we are surrounded by "Superlife," life-forms manipulated by Man. Superlife looks at the stories of how these super organisms came to permeate our planet, and how the latest science is pushing the boundaries to create more with less time and resources and at a higher quality. Note- Superlife explores the science of how mankind is manipulating life for its benefit. The series does not attempt to address the concerns surrounding cloning, genetically modified organisms or the ethics of certain farming practices.

5:12pm
Superlife: Genetic Manipulation
Tulip: Bewitching Enchantress

Superlife: Genetic Manipulation

Tulip: Bewitching Enchantress

Duration: 0:09:00

Audience: Students; Grades: 6-12; Subject Areas: Science. (2014) Designing Life. Man has been doing it for over 10,000 years. You may not be aware of it, but we are surrounded by "Superlife," life-forms manipulated by Man. Superlife looks at the stories of how these super organisms came to permeate our planet, and how the latest science is pushing the boundaries to create more with less time and resources and at a higher quality. Note- Superlife explores the science of how mankind is manipulating life for its benefit. The series does not attempt to address the concerns surrounding cloning, genetically modified organisms or the ethics of certain farming practices.

5:21pm
Superlife: Genetic Manipulation
Bulldog: Form Fearsome to Lovable

Superlife: Genetic Manipulation

Bulldog: Form Fearsome to Lovable

Duration: 0:07:59

Audience: Students; Grades: 6-12; Subject Areas: Science. (2014) Designing Life. Man has been doing it for over 10,000 years. You may not be aware of it, but we are surrounded by "Superlife," life-forms manipulated by Man. Superlife looks at the stories of how these super organisms came to permeate our planet, and how the latest science is pushing the boundaries to create more with less time and resources and at a higher quality. Note- Superlife explores the science of how mankind is manipulating life for its benefit. The series does not attempt to address the concerns surrounding cloning, genetically modified organisms or the ethics of certain farming practices.

5:30pm
What Is Sound?
What Is Sound?

What Is Sound?

What Is Sound?

Duration: 0:14:17

Audience: Students; Grades: K-5; Subject Areas: Science. (2008) When you hear the roar of traffic, the bark of a dog, or your teacher's voice, you are experiencing sound. This program uses colorful animations to explore important characteristics of sound, including intensity, loudness, pitch, and frequency. Concepts and terminology illustrated in this video include: vibrations, frequency, pitch, amplitude, volume, how sound travels, uses of sound energy, speed of sound, and how we hear sounds.

5:44pm
Moving Energy Series - Visual Learning
Exploring Sound

Moving Energy Series - Visual Learning

Exploring Sound

Duration: 0:09:46

Audience: Students; Grades: K-3; Subject Areas: Science. (2013) Almost every second of the day you are surrounded by sounds. Through easy-to-understand examples, this program helps students grasp how sounds are formed andhow sound travels. Special attention is given to the different characteristics of sounds and how we sense sounds. Concepts and terminology: vibrations, ears, volume, and pitch.

5:54pm
Little Math Whiz
Half & Half: Dividing & Measuring

Little Math Whiz

Half & Half: Dividing & Measuring

Duration: 0:05:57

Grades: K-5; Subject Areas: Math. (2013) With the help of exciting math fairy tales, children are introduced to abstract mathematical concepts such as counting, categorizing, shapes and colors. Each program in the series will familiarize students with a different aspect of math by using familiar living environments as its theme. At the end of each program a fun math song repeats and reviews the contents of the fairy tale and its lesson. Correlates to Math Common Core State Standards.

6:00pm
Metric System, The - Visual Learning
CC
Introduction to the Metric System

Metric System, The - Visual Learning

Introduction to the Metric System

Duration: 0:19:25

Audience: Students; Grades: 4-8; Subject Areas: Math. (2006) Introduces the basic units of the metric system and how they compare with the English system of weights and measures. Explains the importance of mensuration and describes different types of physical measurements, including length, distance, volume and mass. Identifies the units of metric measure and discusses the methods of converting from one system to the other. Program concludes with a 10-question video quiz. For the teacher's guide go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLffnlabkhzaEotSk5OUXdfZXNOZ3RFLXFkenFITVBvOGctN2s3dllyTjNvY1U&usp=sharing

6:19pm
Metric System, The - Visual Learning
CC
Metric Length and Temperature

Metric System, The - Visual Learning

Metric Length and Temperature

Duration: 0:19:22

Audience: Students; Grades: 4-8; Subject Areas: Math. (2006) Discusses the processes of measuring length and temperature using metric units of measure. Defines the concepts of length and distance and illustrates the tools used for these physical measurements. Compares the use of meters in metric measurement to standard units in the English system. Also introduces the Celsius thermometer and Kelvin scale, illustrating how temperature is measured using the metric system. Program concludes with a 10-question video quiz. For the teacher's guide go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLffnlabkhzaEotSk5OUXdfZXNOZ3RFLXFkenFITVBvOGctN2s3dllyTjNvY1U&usp=sharing

6:38pm
Metric System, The - Visual Learning
CC
Metric Mass and Volume

Metric System, The - Visual Learning

Metric Mass and Volume

Duration: 0:20:15

Audience: Students; Grades: 4-8; Subject Areas: Math. (2006) Explores how the metric system is used to measure the properties of matter. Defines mass and volume and introduces the metric units used for mass measurement and cubic content. Illustrates how a triple beam balance is used to determine weight and how mass, volume and density are measured in grams, liters and centimeters. Program concludes with a 10-question video quiz. For the teacher's guide go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLffnlabkhzaEotSk5OUXdfZXNOZ3RFLXFkenFITVBvOGctN2s3dllyTjNvY1U&usp=sharing

6:59pm
Metric System, The - Visual Learning
CC
Metric Conversions

Metric System, The - Visual Learning

Metric Conversions

Duration: 0:20:40

Audience: Students; Grades: 4-8; Subject Areas: Math. (2006) Illustrates how to convert English units of measurement to metric units. Begins by explaining how different units of metric measurement can be converted within the system itself and illustrates the formulae for determining mass, volume and density. Contrasts standard units of measure with metric units and illustrates the conversions for length and distance, mass, volume and temperature. Program concludes with a 10-question video quiz. For the teacher's guide go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLffnlabkhzaEotSk5OUXdfZXNOZ3RFLXFkenFITVBvOGctN2s3dllyTjNvY1U&usp=sharing

7:19pm
Dr. Rock Math Adventure
Fractions

Dr. Rock Math Adventure

Fractions

Duration: 0:13:09

Audience: Students; Grades: K-3; Subject: Math. (2005) Dr. Rock explains what fractions are and how they are applied. He uses pieces of fruit to illustrate how fractions are part of a whole. Children are shown using fraction wheels and animated graphics illustrate how fractions represent part of a whole number.

7:32pm
Dr. Rock Math Adventure
Measuring

Dr. Rock Math Adventure

Measuring

Duration: 0:14:25

Audience: Students; Grades: K-3; Subject: Math. (2005) Dr. Rock discusses the fundamentals of measurement. Animated graphics illustrate the concept of physical dimensions, including size, height, and length and show how to measure different types of objects. Also identifies inches, feet and yards as standard units of measurement and describes how to use a ruler.

7:47pm
Noaa Inouye Regional Center
Noaa Inouye Regional Center

Noaa Inouye Regional Center

Noaa Inouye Regional Center

Duration: 0:12:44
8:00pm
Science360: Dispatches from the Cutting Edge
Episode 33

Science360: Dispatches from the Cutting Edge

Episode 33

Duration: 0:58:00

Audience: Students; Grades: 4-12; Subject Areas: Sustainability, STEM. (2020) In this episode: Socially assistive robots, 4 Awesome Discoveries, wearable medical devices, how termites keep cool, origami inspired robots, water tracks in the arctic, what is a telescope, exploring the rainforest with the Native American and Pacific...

9:00pm
Shape of Life, The: Story of the Animal Kingdom
CC
Sponges: Animal Origins

Shape of Life, The: Story of the Animal Kingdom

Sponges: Animal Origins

Duration: 0:29:13

Audience: Students; Grades: 9-12; Science In Indonesia, introduces the story of animal origins by filming underwater explorations made by taxonomist,Christina Diaz. Ms. Diaz classifies some of the 9,000 species of sponge finding in them, vibrant animals who embody the first principles of life and living things. Focusing on cell-to cell communication, she demonstrates how sponges perform the work performed by organs in higher animals and shows how collagen supports sponge structure. She also explains how spicules define the species of sponge and how sponges obtain their food. Computer animation demonstrates how sponges feed and reproduce themselves. Moving to the Woods Hole Biological Laboratory, interviews Mitchell Sogin, an evolutionary biologist, whose experiments in gene sequencing have demonstrated that sponges are at the base of the animal kingdom. For Teacher's Guides go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLffk5QOEpyUGs2NnQ3cjRETGlnZHB3RjN3VkRrSC1wZWxUQ3pwWGFxRV9lYlU&usp=sharing

9:29pm
Shape of Life, The: Story of the Animal Kingdom
CC
Cnidarians: Behavior on the Move

Shape of Life, The: Story of the Animal Kingdom

Cnidarians: Behavior on the Move

Duration: 0:29:28

Audience: Students; Grades: 9-12; Science. (2003) Biologist John "Jack" Costello explains how cnidarians, the first tentacled animals, were also the first to develop nerves and muscles that allowed them to move, find food, and protect themselves from enemies. Close-up photography of sea aenmones and corals reveal complex behaviors that might be expected of higher level animals. Costello also reviews his studies of jellyfish movement that enabled this cnidarian to become a predatory killer. In Monterey Bay, marine biologist, Bruce Robison travels in an underwater capsule called an R-O-V to discover a new species of giant jellyfish. For Teacher's Guides go to: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B9ZT7PYcIjLffk5QOEpyUGs2NnQ3cjRETGlnZHB3RjN3VkRrSC1wZWxUQ3pwWGFxRV9lYlU&usp=sharing

10:00pm
History of Life Series: A Study In Evolution
Plants: Earth's Quiet Rulers

History of Life Series: A Study In Evolution

Plants: Earth's Quiet Rulers

Duration: 0:44:23

Audience: Students; Grades: 9-12; Subject: Science. (2013) Explore the history of life from its humble beginnings as single-celled organisms, to its great blossoming and proliferation, which took place over the course of eons. With the help of state of the art computer graphics, the world's foremost paleontologists and biologists help unravel the greatest mysteries of life. Plants, Earth's Quiet Rulers Plants, the oldest form of life on earth hold many mysteries. While plants are often thought of as passive, we will see how many species have adopted aggressive strategies that have allowed for their survival. It is these "quiet rulers" of earth that are not only the foundation of the global ecology, but also the spring from which all life flows.

10:44pm
Day in the Life of a Stem Teacher
Scott Kunihiro

Day in the Life of a Stem Teacher

Scott Kunihiro

Duration: 0:15:30
11:00pm
Historic Sites of Hawaii
Lyon Arboretum

Historic Sites of Hawaii

Lyon Arboretum

Duration: 0:15:00

Audience: General; Subject: Social Studies.(2015) Hidden in the back of Manoa Valley, the Lyon Arboretum is a historic site that serves as a botanical garden, an educational institution, and a research facility. The documentary tells the history of the arboretum and the vital role it played in preserving our watershed. The many present-day activities of the arboretum are also featured including its work in preserving and exhibiting Native Hawaiian and exotic plants, its role as an educational institution and its role as a research facility.

11:15pm
Historic Sites of Hawaii
The Hawaiian Rare Plant Program of the Lyon Arboretum

Historic Sites of Hawaii

The Hawaiian Rare Plant Program of the Lyon Arboretum

Duration: 0:14:18

Audience: General; Subject: Social Studies.(2015) This documentary covers the activities of the Hawaiian Rare Plant Program at the Lyon Arboretum, a program that seeks to propagate and preserve the most endangered plant species in our islands. The documentary explores the program's three main components: a seed bank, a micro-propagation laboratory, and its greenhouse facilities. The processes of seed storage and micro-propagation are explained, and several rarely seen endangered plants are featured.

11:30pm
Grow
School Gardens

Grow

School Gardens

Duration: 0:29:30

Audience: General; Subject: Schools. (2018) See two large garden programs of the Hawaii Department of Education. First, Waikiki Elementary School's Mindful School Garden. Started on Earth Day over10 years ago, the fruit trees and farm plants are still going strong with help from students, parents, and community. Second, Makaha Elementary School's partnership with neighboring farm Hoa 'Aina O Makaha. Interviews with school garden teachers and staff.