Open-and-go lessons that inspire kids to love science.

Science curriculum for K—5th grades.

90 sec
  • Hands-on lead students in the doing of science and engineering.
  • Standards-aligned science lessons Cover core standards in 1-2 hours of science per week.
  • Less prep, more learning prep in minutes not hours. Captivate your students with short videos and discussion questions.

Sign up now to try Mystery Science for free.

Sign up

Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
What’s going on in this picture? Does this bird have more than two legs?
5
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
The extra legs are actually baby birds! This father bird--a jacana bird--lets them rest in his feathers, and hides them from danger.
5
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Lots of animal parents carry their babies around-- check out this opossum!
5
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
This giraffe is learning to walk! Human babies first walk when they’re about 12 months old. How old do you think this giraffe is?
4
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
This giraffe was born just hours before this video was taken. Some animals, like these, can walk the same day they’re born!
4
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Some animals look very different when they’re born, compared to when they grow up. Can you tell what animals these are?
3
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
These brown birds are young penguins! They don’t grow black and white feathers like their parents until they are 6-7 months old.
3
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
This is a baby ladybug! Beetles start out as larvae and transform into adults with wings -- just like caterpillars turn into butterflies!
3
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
This is a newborn baby panda! Look how small it is! It can’t even open its eyes yet.
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Are these real pandas? What do you think is going on here?
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
The big pandas are scientists in costumes, but the baby panda is real! Why would scientists dress up when helping wild animals?
2
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Scientists want this baby to know what pandas look like. They want it to grow up and live with other pandas, not people.
2
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Here’s another example. This scientist uses a puppet that looks like an adult bird -- a crane -- to teach the baby how to eat.
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
This might look scary, but these babies are perfectly safe! Why do you think this mother crocodile is doing this?
1
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Some animals carry their babies on their back. This crocodile is just carrying its babies in its mouth! She’s helping them find water.
1
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Slide Image
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen
Full Screen
Controls Icon Exit Full Screen

Voting for this episode is now closed. Would you like to vote on the most recent poll?

We pulled three questions from our jar. Which question do you want to explore?

  • How is cheese made?

    -Glenn, 2nd Grade

  • Why do animals have tails?

    -Eowyn, 4th Grade

  • How many stars are in the sky?

    -Danna, 3rd Grade

Can a shark and a dolphin have babies?

Watch the video to discover the answer and don't forget to vote for next week's question. There are mysteries all around us. Have fun and stay curious!