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> once the "boring" educational content starts Imagine a cartoon about a kid playing with a doll. Cartoon creators know a lot about related topics, like life skills, social dynamics, fashion, etc. And so they can seamlessly integrate bits of those rich domains of expertise into the cartoon. The OP cartoon bear video covers a lot of ground. But now imagine a cartoon about a kid playing with a puddle. Cartoon creators know very little about puddles. Almost nothing of their physics, biology, chemistry, geology, engineering, and so on. No clue - stomp, laugh, mess. So science doesn't get the integrated and engaging storytelling which those other topics do. But there seems no fundamental reason it can't. Except... searching for videos is painful. Even when you know a video exists, it's often implausible to find. Using google and bing video search to find bits of educational content, feels like searching the web circa early AltaVista - one stop among several, all of very limited effectiveness. FWIW, here's a big stinky whale heart https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kJnKuw7Wvz4 hoisted for display https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N4JIwlkUdEs . A kid demoing a heart rate app https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BOjWmA_7yUc , and taking a stress test https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MCS_6ixfq8U . A fetal hr app https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5XaYl6RJVsc&start=13 . A rabbit hr https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADLFLDszTYA&start=50 . A boring video of an interactive heart anatomy app https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLyXWjWcQtc&start=65 , to illustrate that VR/AR has the potential to massively disrupt education. A boring exhibit with some hearts https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QthT9bs8Tws&start=15 . There are very many videos on stethoscope use, variously flawed. Which is great for assembling piles of Fair Use clips, but not so good for linking here. And... out of time. So to reframe my original question: I wonder if youtube kids viral video formats might be used for outreach... but the cost of creation could be prohibitively large. Though there might be low hanging fruit, like a play-do egg surprise, filled with water, or bubble foam, or jello, or liquid nitrogen, or hydrogen, or... Thanks for your comment. I was(am?) considering an education project, but was clearly doing selective memory on just how massively time consuming it would be. |
They want a Paw Patrol figurine to emerge from the play-doh, for the millionth time. Not some stupid liquid hydrogen (I view it the other way around, but I'm not the target audience).
And the pull of those silly videos is incredibly strong. We also have an excellent app with literally hundreds of educational clips from "Die Sendung mit der Maus" [1] [2]. My son likes them, and will watch them for hours on end if he gets the chance -- and so will I, because they are genuinely interesting and amusing.
Yet if given the choice, he will pick Youtube and the silly videos every time.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Die_Sendung_mit_der_Maus [2] http://www.wdrmaus.de/extras/maus_international/englisch.php...
> I was(am?) considering an education project
Wonderful. We can't have enough decent, genuinely amusing education, especially against this flood of trash.