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Christian Giang; Loredana Addimando; Luca Botturi; Lucio Negrini; Alessandro Giusti; Alberto Piatti – Journal for STEM Education Research, 2023
Technologies have become an essential part of the daily life of our children. Consequently, artifacts that imply the early adoption of abstract thinking affect the imagination of children and young people in relation to the world of technology, now much more than they did in the past. With the emerging importance of robots in many aspects of our…
Descriptors: Robotics, Freehand Drawing, Childrens Art, Science Fiction
Morvay, Jenna Kamrass – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
In this article, N.K. Jemisin's multiple-Hugo-award-winning trilogy "The Broken Earth" (2015-2017) is read with Sylvia Wynter's genealogy of who counts as human, and Donna Haraway's conception of the "Chthulucene," a spatiotemporal location in which all beings are interconnected with each other. The article argues that…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Social Distance, Education, World Views
Cole, David R. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
The global pandemic has pushed many of us to online streaming services. A particular genre in these services is the 'end of the world' science fiction film, in and through which the speculated results of processes such as climate change are depicted. CGI technology is frequently deployed to create images of the end of the world, which is a…
Descriptors: Films, Teaching Methods, Environmental Education, Educational Philosophy
McMain, Emma Minke; Edwards-Schuth, Brandon – Policy Futures in Education, 2023
The iPhone 62 has just been released. Political gridlock and the governmentally approved process of locking immigrant children in cages continue ad infinitum. Public schools resort to primarily remote learning as pandemic viruses ebb and flow. University students study post-postmodernism on campuses that remain on stolen Indigenous land. In this…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Science Fiction, Ecology, Justice
Rickards, Nicholas G. – Review of Education, Pedagogy & Cultural Studies, 2023
Through the use of horror movie motifs like zombies and mad doctors, "The Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials" (2015) stands in drastic contrast to other young adult dystopian properties like "The Hunger Games" (2012), for example, in that "Scorch Trials" uses allegory as a means to comment on neoliberalism, alienated…
Descriptors: Films, Popular Culture, Young Adults, Social Systems
Obelleiro, Gonzalo – Educational Theory, 2020
In two articles, "Might Knowledge Be Insertable?" and "Is Knowledge Insertion Desirable?," John Tillson argues that knowledge insertion is conceivable and desirable for the person who has it inserted. By knowledge insertion, he means the immediate or almost immediate acquisition of knowledge by means other than traditional…
Descriptors: Knowledge Level, Science Fiction, Films, Intervention
Itir Toksöz – Journal of Peace Education, 2024
Given the increasing popularity of the science-fiction genre, its capacity for worldbuilding and its long-durée vision, coupled with both the difficulty of discussing issues of migration in today's world as something more than a problem of the present and the necessity to go beyond this presentism, the author argues that science-fiction films…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Peace, Education, Migration
Lorenzo Sánchez-Gatt – Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, 2023
I argue that an analysis of antiblack racism in music education discourse is crucial in identifying and addressing potential for harm in the music classroom. I contend that Black children are particularly, and regularly, subjected to poor stereotypical depictions of their identity in digital media. Furthermore, I contend that this digital…
Descriptors: Afrocentrism, Futures (of Society), Music Education, Racism
Gough, Noel; Adsit-Morris, Chessa – Environmental Education Research, 2020
We address the aims of this Special Issue by exploring, critiquing, and responding constructively to the emergence and potential significance of new materialist thought in environmental education research and the broader theoretical landscape in which such research is situated. We offer some productive possibilities for advancing postparadigmatic…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Educational Research, Semiotics, Postmodernism
de Carvalho Ferrasa, Ingrid Aline; Machado, Elaine Ferreira; Miquelin, Awdry Feisser; Mocellin, Ronei Clécio; Leal, Bruna Elise Sauer; Kuchla, Micheli; Oliveira, Luciane Kawa Reis; Coelho, Adriane Marie Salm – Science & Education, 2023
In this article, we present reflections on the possible dialogs between literary creation and science teaching. Our considerations will be directed to the work of Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, and the role of science and science education over the text that gave rise to the genre "science fiction." This work aims at presenting the…
Descriptors: Fiction, Science Instruction, Science Education, Authors
Gearon, Liam – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2018
This article argues that Wells' science fiction and subsequent political engagements are a continuum expressed by an imperative: that human history is held 'between education and catastrophe'. The life and work of a politically unfashionable but still popular writer of science fiction are also a masterclass in establishing the critical importance…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Educational Philosophy, Political Attitudes, Archives
Robinson, Stacey A.; Jennings, John I. – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2021
"Teaching Black Masculinity through The Uncanny Black Kirby" will examine Marvel Comics's and Netflix's Luke Cage: Hero for Higher through the last 48 years of unstably grounded imaginings. The exhibition is an illustrated syllabus with a bibliography and contextualizing imagery that educators can use in a 10-16 week unit. Creating…
Descriptors: Masculinity, Cartoons, Popular Culture, African American History
Mustafa, Suroor Yaseen; Khalil, Huda H. – Arab World English Journal, 2019
With the challenges and revolutionary changes in the world, it is essential that the sources of social power direct the communities towards the right path that leads to a brighter future, especially when it comes to young adults. Young adults represent a critical social group that needs special attention. Therefore, the present paper tackles one…
Descriptors: Novels, Young Adults, Literary Genres, Science Fiction
Wallin, Jason J. – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2017
The significance of educational research is today predicated on its ability to engage with the ecological, economic, and political challenges of the anthropocene, for where we might take seriously education's commitment to the future necessitates a sustained encounter with the implications and questions raised in the wake of "our"…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Ecology, Futures (of Society), Educational Trends
Akhter, Tawhida – Arab World English Journal, 2021
Literature has been an imitator of life for generations on this earth, this literature has voiced the voiceless. Recent contemporary and postmodern literary theories have catered to burgeoning notions of logic that go beyond human survival on the planet. Science fiction is a genre of fiction that encompasses imaginative concepts like futuristic…
Descriptors: Novels, Futures (of Society), Science Fiction, COVID-19