STEAM or “Science, Technology, Engineering, Art, and Mathematics” is something I have reignited my interest in since I started watching Thunderfoot, ElectroBOOM, Steve Mould,Brains TechKwowlogy and others. I need some great STEAM resources that can be easily be understood by beginners and autistic people (yes I have autism).

  • Imnecomrade@lemmygrad.ml
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    11 months ago

    If you search online for awesome {insert subject here} git (or github), you will find many curated lists of resources. For example: Awesome Mechanical Engineering Resources and Awesome Biology

  • MeowZedong@lemmygrad.ml
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    11 months ago

    Not sure what’s with the link to the Flat Earther stuff, but assuming this was asked in good faith…here are some additional YouTube sources:

    • Baumgartner Restoration for restoration of paintings

    • Brick Experiment Channel for Lego experiments

    • Cody’sLab for an eclectic mix of chemistry, biology, engineering, etc.

    • DIY Perks for mostly technology engineering/tinkering

    • NileRed for in-depth chemistry experiments and methodology

    • Nomadic Nostoc for microbiology, etc under a digital microscope

    • Periodic Videos for a mix of informative and goofy chemistry from a research lab group

    • Practical Engineering for (mostly) civil engineering explained, models, and following along construction projects

    • SmarterEveryDay has a lot of good videos on engineering, but the content can also be very pro-US military

    • TAMU Physics and Astronomy…for physics and astronomy

    • Tech Ingredients for DIY engineering and home experiments, kind of covers a large range of science

    • Technology Connections for long discussions about a variety of technologies you interact with at home daily

    • The Action Lab for short-form science experiments (~10 minutes)

    • The Slow Mo Guys for cool slow motion videos. Sometimes these are educational and they do experiments.

    • Tom Scott for random science and interesting places or constructions around the world (channel is stopping/taking a break soon)

    • Up and Atom for science/physics/chemistry

    • Veritasium for science/math/physics all over the board, generally very interesting and well-produced videos

    • Ze Frank for goofy facts and videos of animals that will actually give you some fun facts about biology while mostly being about comedy

    I didn’t list the channels heavily focused on studies and most of my cool art and music channels are on a different account that I’d need to look up. Hopefully this gives you some places to jump off from!

      • MeowZedong@lemmygrad.ml
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        11 months ago

        A makes more sense! I didn’t look at the poster until after replying and I was like “ah, no way this wasn’t posted in good faith.”

        Hopefully you enjoy some of these. If you want some channels for science or math that go in-depth on subjects in a more studying focused way, just let me know. They aren’t the most approachable for getting interested in a subject, but they are great for learning outside of a traditional school.

        YouTube educators are the only thing that got me through college since I could go back through topics at my own pace and rewatch parts I didn’t understand. I hate classroom learning and find it is much easier for me to learn independently through mixed media. My focus is mainly chemistry, but I have some good resources around many related subjects too.

  • yewler@lemmygrad.ml
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    11 months ago

    As far as mathematics is concerned, the following YouTube channels are splendid.

    • 3blue1brown
    • Mathologer
    • Michael Penn
    • Another Roof
    • Reducible