Watch the Quidget Family and the Subtractobats perform high-flying feats of mathematics! In this astounding story, Leap, Lily, Tad and wacky Professor Quigley train numbers to count, add, and subtract in a series of amazing circus acts. Numbers and Quidgets fly from trampolines, trapezes and cannons as they teach early mathematical concepts.
Jiminy Cricket explains the basics of fire safety.
Spider-Man provides a children's safety guide about walking home from school and being home alone.
Spider-man teaches how to say no to drugs and why, including negative effects they have on the body.
Non-theatrical government - war short Produced for Coordinator of Inter-American Affairs
The lecturer shows a microcinematographic sequence of spirochaetes and drawings of the gonoccus (the bacteria responsible for syphilis and gonorrhea). He then turns to an easel and begins to draw 'the road of health'; the cartoon takes this up in magic drawing, in a style that is highly reminiscent of the 'Giro the Germ' series made for the Health and Cleanliness Council a few years before.
Pooh gets confused when Christopher Robin leaves him a note to say that he has gone back to school after the holidays. So Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, Eeyore and Rabbit go in search of Christopher Robin which leads to a big adventure.
Animated training film depicting the fundamentals of electricity and how electrical signals can be used to keep an airplane on correct course and altitude through an autopilot.
The computer animation Outside In explains the amazing discovery, made by Steve Smale in 1957, that a sphere can be turned inside out by means of smooth motions and self-intersections. Through a combination of dialogue and exposition accessible to anyone who has some interest in mathematics, Outside In builds up to the grand finale: Bill Thurston's "corrugations" method of turning the sphere inside out.
Jiminy Cricket narrates the history and practice of pedestrian traffic safety.
Jiminy Cricket explains how the ear works, both for hearing and balance.
Jiminy Cricket teaches children about the eyes.
Jiminy Cricket teaches water safety.
Jiminy Cricket explains the interconnected senses of smell and taste.
Jiminy Cricket explains the sense of touch, its four components (heat, cold, pain, pressure), and its unique dispersed nature.
Jiminy Cricket explains the five senses, contrasting man and other animals.
Jiminy Cricket explains how man resembles and differs from other animals, particularly the use of language, the use of reason, and opposable thumbs.
Jiminy Cricket explains how every living thing has its proper kind of food, and how it is used, plus the basics of nutrition.
This film suggests the usage of common sense to minimize the normal stresses and strains of everyday life.
One of the educational short films in the "What Should I Do?"-series made by Walt Disney Productions.