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Showing 46 to 60 of 133 results Save | Export
Yuasa, Kyoko – Online Submission, 2012
Modern critics do not consider science fiction and mystery novels to be "serious reading", but Dorothy L. Sayers and C. S. Lewis questioned the boundaries between "popular" and "serious" literature. Both Christian writers critically discuss the spiritual crisis of the modern world in each fiction genre. This paper…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Fiction, Novels, Postmodernism
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Cunningham, Clifton – College Mathematics Journal, 2008
An interesting number system is developed in the context of an encounter with alien culture. The resulting system has intriguing parallels and contrasts with our real number system.
Descriptors: Foreign Culture, Number Systems, Mathematics, Number Concepts
O'Sullivan, Emer – Scarecrow Press, 2010
Children's literature comes from a number of different sources--folklore (folk- and fairy tales), books originally for adults and subsequently adapted for children, and material authored specifically for them--and its audience ranges from infants through middle graders to young adults (readers from about 12 to 18 years old). Its forms include…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Young Adults, Fairy Tales, Anthologies
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Smith, Donald A. – Physics Teacher, 2009
In 2006 I had the chance to design a physics course for students not majoring in scientific fields. I chose to shape the course around science fiction, not as a source for quantitative problems but as a means for conveying important physics concepts. I hoped that, by encountering these concepts in narratives, students with little or no science or…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Fiction, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction
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Subramaniam, Mega; Ahn, June; Waugh, Amanda; Druin, Allison – Knowledge Quest, 2012
Understanding how to better engage young students in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) is essential. The constraints of U.S. K-12 schools (e.g. insufficient institutional supports, lack of technology access, testing pressures, etc.) often make it difficult to create truly engaging STEM curricula with which students can deeply…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Elementary Secondary Education, School Libraries, STEM Education
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Alexander, Bryan – EDUCAUSE Review, 2009
Deciding which technologies to support for teaching and learning--and how to support them--depends, first, on the ability to learn about each emerging development. Selecting a platform without knowing what is coming right behind it can be risky. Similarly, it is folly to grasp onto a technology without seeing the variety of ways that the…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Educational Technology, Science Fiction, Teaching Methods
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Blackmore, Tim – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
Creating memory during and after wartime trauma is vexed by state attempts to control public and private discourse. Science fiction author Iain Banks' novel "Look to Windward" proposes different ways of preserving memory and culture, from posthuman memory devices, to artwork, to architecture, to personal, local ways of remembering.…
Descriptors: Memory, War, Foreign Countries, Influence of Technology
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Hasse, Cathrine – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2008
It has been argued that in higher education academic disciplines can be seen as communities of practices. This implies a focus on what constitutes identities in academic culture. In this article I argue that the transition from newcomer to a full participant in a community of practice of physicists entails a focus on how identities emerge in…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Intellectual Disciplines
Herman, William E. – Online Submission, 2009
This paper is designed to accompany an appearance by the author as a panelist during a session on science fiction and teaching methods at the I-CON 28 Science Fiction Convention held April 3-5, 2009, on Long Island (near New York City). The author describes how he employs social science fiction in an honors course at the university level to…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Teaching Methods, Higher Education, Conferences (Gatherings)
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Ribbat, Christoph – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2010
In a satiric chapter of David Foster Wallace's novel "Infinite Jest," a mock media expert reports how American consumers of the near future recoil from a new communication device known as "videophony" and return to the voice-only telephone of the Bell Era. This article explores the said chapter in the framework of media theories reading the…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Telecommunications, Video Technology, Influence of Technology
Oatman, Eric – School Library Journal, 2008
This article profiles Orson Scott Card, the winner of this year's Margaret A. Edwards Award for his outstanding contributions to teen literature, specifically for Ender's Game and Ender's Shadow (1999, both Tor), a companion tale. Card, the magician behind both of these best sellers, is one of the nation's most prolific--and contentious--authors.…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Science Fiction, Authors, Writing (Composition)
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Thomas, Trudelle – International Journal of Children's Spirituality, 2008
The following essay is a close reading of Madeleine L'Engle's science fantasy novel, "A Wind in the Door", in which young Meg Murry travels first to outer space and then into her younger brother's ailing cells. The novel is a fine example of high fantasy (also known as heroic fantasy) wherein a humble protagonist is called to a quest to fight a…
Descriptors: Structural Elements (Construction), Fantasy, Religious Factors, Novels
Hayn, Judith A., Ed.; Kaplan, Jeffrey S., Ed. – Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2012
"Teaching Young Adult Literature Today" introduces the reader to what is current and relevant in the plethora of good books available for adolescents. More importantly, literary experts illustrate how teachers everywhere can help their students become lifelong readers by simply introducing them to great reads--smart, insightful, and engaging books…
Descriptors: Reading Lists, Adolescent Literature, Language Arts, Young Adults
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Lloyd, Margaret – Journal of Learning Design, 2010
There is a "reality" to being online which we know to be false. We are simultaneously "there" but "not there" as we talk, work and play with others in online spaces. We move between physical and virtual spaces in ways that realise the predictions made for computers in the mid-20th Century and enact scenarios from science fiction. We are left…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Social Change, Social Environment, Electronic Learning
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Dawson, Janis – Children's Literature in Education, 2007
This article discusses Philip Reeve's young adult science fiction novels as literary collages. It explores the ways in which the author uses postmodernisms to introduce big ideas and construct a compelling futuristic world that combines fast-paced adventure with the "bildungsroman".
Descriptors: Novels, Adolescent Literature, Science Fiction, Postmodernism
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