CrashCourse
Slavery - Crash Course US History #13
The Mughal Empire and Historical Reputation: Crash Course World History #217
Dutch Golden Age: Crash Course European History #15
Indus Valley Civilization: Crash Course World History #2
How World War I Started: Crash Course World History 209
Evaluating Sources & Fact Checking: Crash Course Scientific Thinking #6
Are you consuming a credit card’s worth of misinformation every week? In this episode of Crash Course Scientific Thinking, we’ll learn how to check facts and evaluate sources, so we can
Reading & Writing Latin American literature: Crash Course Latin American Literature #13
Literature doesn’t begin and end when a writer puts words on a page. In our final episode of Crash Course Latin American Literature, we’ll explore how literature is shaped by readers and
How Scientists Build Consensus: Crash Course Scientific Thinking #5
Why is there consensus around atoms existing, but not around if chocolate is good for you? In this episode of Crash Course Scientific Thinking, we’ll explore why there are still things we
Film & Literature: Crash Course Latin American Literature #12
Lights, camera, action! Latin American literature intersects with all sorts of other kinds of art, including film. In this episode of Crash Course Latin American Literature, we explore the
Peer Review and the Quest for Truth: Crash Course Scientific Thinking #4
In 2010, a NASA-backed study boldly announced that we’d found alien life right here on Earth. So where are all these aliens? In this episode of Crash Course Scientific Thinking, we search
Nature in Latin American Literature: Crash Course Latin American Literature #3
Who is Mother Nature REALLY? In this episode of Crash Course Latin American Literature, we’ll uncover how representations of Latin American landscapes have often reflected shifting social
What is sex?: Sex Ed #1
What even is sex? In this episode of Crash Course Sex Ed, we’ll discover that variation is the name of the game when it comes to sexuality. People differ in how they have sex, why they have